Yes, but to be on the safe side check with your Dr. to make sure there is no other problems.
yes, it takes at least 6 months to 2 years to straighten out. No action on your part required.
Amenorrhea is the word used for the absence or the abnormal stopping of menses. A female must miss three periods in a row for it to be considered amenorrhea.
yes it changed due the pill.
No! Once you stop taking the medication your periods and ovulation will go back to normal!
Yes! This can be very normal. It's all in what kind of bc you were using. I used depo for about a year and didn't get a period for a little over a year after stopping. Hello there. Yes this is quite a common occurance in a lot of women after stopping birth control pills. Some lucky women go on to have regular monthly periods while the majority of women, experience irregular periods for a few months after stopping birth control. It generally takes around three months for birth control to be out of your system so by the fourth or fifth month of stopping the pills, your periods should be becomming more regular.
This can be caused by various things such as: * Pregnancy. * Medication you are taking. * Hormonal imbalance. * Irregular periods. * Infection. * Stress. * Illness. An 11 day period is NOT normal, you need to see a doctor
Depends upon what normal is for that medication; for you.
Yes, it's normal to have two periods in one month after you stop taking [hormonal] birth control - remember that periods aren't dictated by the calendar, but by your hormones. While on hormonal birth control your menstrual cycles are suppressed so that you don't ovulate, as you don't ovulate you don't menstruate, the bleeding you experience is a withdrawal bleed caused by the drop in synthetic hormones when going from active to inactive pills. Once off the birth control it takes time for your body to get back into a regular menstrual cycle.
Cancer is caused when the normal mechanisms that control cell growth become disturbed, causing the cells to continually grow without stopping.
Your first period after stopping birth control pills will normally arrive in 4-6 weeks. If your periods were irregular before you went on the pill, they're likely to return quickly to their previous irregular pattern.
Sometimes - if you have PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome) you don't have regular periods at all unless you are on medication (Birth Control or glucophage). It seems to early for menopause. I would go see a doctor.
Yes, you can have periods and not have another for mouths its completely normal.