Because it acts like if they were starting their period, but actually ending it. Hormones
For women with mood swings related to the menstrual cycle, the birth control pill may be helpful. Some women find the pill increases mood swings. Talk with your health care provider about what might be helpful in your situation.
Women in Rwanda do have a menstrual cycle, like women in any other country do.
Because your menstrual cycle is the lining of your uterus shedding.
Women typically produce eggs during their menstrual cycle around the middle of the cycle, usually around day 14. This process is known as ovulation.
For some women, the birth control pill improves mood swings, and for others it lessens them. Talk with your health care provider about the pattern and type of mood swings you experience. Keep a diary of mood with respect to your menstrual cycle. This information will help you find a pill that will work best for you.
If you are a female then you are always in your menstrual cycle. The term 'menstrual cycle' is another word for the reproductive cycle, women are essentially always within this cycle - although it can be thrown off-balance, when a woman is pregnant, or suspended by hormonal birth control.
Yes, gas pains and bloating are the 2 most common side effects of the menstrual cycle. This can happen in both older women and younger women.
The contraceptive implant prevents the normal menstrual cycle. Some women have irregular bleeding, and others have no bleeding at all.
The menstrual cycle is the entire reproductive cycle - I think you mean during menstruation.Yes, a woman can practice yoga during menstruation, in fact some poses can be very beneficial to menstrual health and ease menstrual cramps.
Some innovative menstrual devices that can help improve women's health and well-being during their menstrual cycle include menstrual cups, period-tracking apps, and period-proof underwear.
No, not every woman has a menstrual cycle. Most healthy adult cis-women will menstruate, however women who have reached menopause will no longer have a menstrual cycle, nor will women who have had a hysterectomy - basically women who are no longer fertile. Women who use hormonal birth control don't have a menstrual cycle, as the purpose of hormonal birth control is to suppress the menstrual cycle so they don't ovulate - the bleeding women get is a withdrawal bleed, it mimics menstruation but isn't the same as menstruation. Many women were born biologically male, thus regardless of changes to their gender or genital reassignment surgery to change their sex, they are not capable of ovulation and thus don't have a menstrual cycle - although interestingly hormones given to many transsexual women can create symptoms similar to that of the menstrual cycle.
Yes, they often do.