After day 2 of your period you could possibly get pregnant but the chance is slight. It would be highest for women who have very short cycles (22 to 25 days) verses a normal or long cycle (28 to 32 days).
spotting can be pregnancy or just normal. all girls are different. sometimes spotting just happens.
No, you sound normal. The longer I was on the pill the lighter my periods got. If you missed any pills you may have a problem, but I doubt that you are.
If a woman has a period, it is unlikely that she is pregnant; however, birth control is not 100% effective. The bleeding you have while on birth control is not actually a period; it is withdrawal bleeding, a reaction to lower hormones in the days you use a placebo pill. If you're having a typical withdrawal bleed, chances are low that you are pregnant. If you're pregnant, you will not have a normal withdrawal bleed. However you may experience brown vaginal bleeding or no bleeding at all. Even without the birth control pill, some pregnant women have bleeding (similar, but not equal, to a period) in the first month. This spotting is common, and doesn't mean that something is wrong with the pregnancy. But if you're having bleeding or spotting with a positive pregnancy test, contact your health care provider today. If you're having pain, bleeding, and a positive pregnancy test, go to the emergency room. Pregnancy with bleeding while on birth control is possible. First, birth control pills are not 100% effective and it is possible to become pregnant while on them. Second, bleeding during pregnancy is possible, but usually signals a miscarriage or ectopic pregnancy.
Hormonal birth control changes your menstrual bleeding. It's not unusual to have brown spotting instead of a regular period when you're on birth control.
Yes, withdrawal bleeding can be red, dark brown, or black when you're on hormonal birth control. Any of these counts as a withdrawal bleed.
When you're on hormonal birth control, the amount and color of withdrawal bleeding may be different from your period when you're not on birth control. Brown discharge counts as a period when you're on the pill, patch, or ring.
If you are pregnant you don't bleed, and blood turns brown when it's dry, I suggest you get a pregnancy test.
It does sound as though you might have had a miscarriage. If the bleeding has now stopped and you feel otherwise well with no fever you will probably never know for sure. If the bleeding is still heavy and/or you feel ill GO TO THE DOCTOR!!!
When you miss birth control pills, the hormone level in your body drops. This can result in withdrawal bleeding, which may be red, Brown, or black. Use a backup method until you've taken the birth control pill correctly for seven days. Consider using the morning after pill if you've had sex in the last five days. talk with your health care provider about other birth control options that are easier for you to use correctly.
Hi, No this isn't normal hun. This sounds like break through bleeding. This can happen when pregnancy has occured and is usually implantation bleeding or when the doseage of birth control isn't high enough for you. Perform a pregnancy test in 2 weeks. If the test is negative then you aren't pregnant. If you experience brown spotting prior to your next period arriving, then see your doctor.
Hi, Causes of vagina discharge while taking birth control are: * Implantation bleeding. * Withdrawal bleed from missing one or more pills. * Urinary tract infection. * Pregnancy.
It's not likely you're pregnant with days of vaginal bleeding. Take a pregnancy test if you think you might be pregnant.
It doesn't mean that. A woman who can be pregnant can be pregnant. A woman can have withdrawal bleeding for unrelated reasons. It's almost like asking why having blue eyes means you can still have brown hair.
Brown bleeding is not always normal. Accompanied with pain, you should see your doctor immediately.