Body weight should be within 5% of normal body weight for your menstrual cycle to "behave" normally. Here's a great article on body weight and menstruation: http://www.ivillage.co.uk/pregnancyandbaby/fertility/conception/qas/0,,4_161470,00.html
The end of a menstrual cycle is marked by the onset of menstruation, which is the shedding of the uterine lining. This typically occurs if there has been no fertilization of an egg during the cycle. The start of menstruation signals the beginning of a new cycle, as the body prepares to reset and start the process of ovulation and potential fertilization again.
Menstrual period refers to menstruation or your period, which is the start of your menstrual cycle. If you're referring to mid-cycle then midway through the menstrual cycle is typically when a woman would ovulate.
You can't force your menstrual cycle, it will start only when it is ready to do so. You can't force your body to ovulate and thus to menstruate until it is ready.
Menstrual cycle is about 28 days that prepares the body for pregnancy.
it is normal. it happens to most people. this is because the body hasn't found it's "pattern" yet, and is just getting used to its monthly cycle.
Menstrual cycle refers to the entire reproductive cycle, starting during menstruation - there is no 'after the menstrual cycle' but I think you might mean after menstruation. After menstruation the cycle starts again, typically a woman will be fertile around a week after menstruation so her body will produce fertile cervical mucus and she will ovulate.
No, a change in the weather cannot affect the menstrual cycle. The menstrual cycle is controlled by hormones in your body, not by the weather.
The body's natural hormones regulate the menstrual cycle.
Your body is getting ready to have a baby but if the egg you produce is not fertilized by a sperm it along with it's lining fall out of your body through your vagina therefore creating your period which then happens over again creating the menstrual cycle. Hope this helps!
At the end of a menstrual cycle, the unfertilized egg is either absorbed by the body or expelled during menstruation. The lining of the uterus, which thickened in preparation for a possible pregnancy, sheds as menstrual bleeding. This marks the start of a new menstrual cycle.
Yes, if that's when you're due to start bleeding. Your menstrual cycle is not controlled by the calendar, your uterus doesn't have a little diary to tell it when to bleed. When you menstruate is determine by hormonal changes in your body, sometimes your menstrual cycle will start at the end of the month.
If an egg is not fertilized during the menstrual cycle, it will eventually disintegrate and be reabsorbed by the body. The levels of hormones such as estrogen and progesterone will drop, leading to the shedding of the uterine lining, which is expelled from the body as menstrual bleeding. This process typically occurs around 14 days after ovulation, marking the start of a new menstrual cycle.