Yes irregular bleeding or spotting, especially if you stopped mid cycle is a common side effect of stopping BCP.
In my experience yes because your body is use to the pill and when it is taken away then your body thinks that it is that time again. Also wen you are supose to hae your pirod and you take the pills they are just a reminder pill so that you wont forget so it is not really medicated. Your body will think that you are not taking the medicine so it must be time to hav eyou cycle.
Yes, you can bleed after discontinuing the pill. You know how your period starts when you start the last several pills in the pack? It is because those are placebos (fake pills) which trigger your body to start menstruating. That is what happens when you stop taking the pill. Totally normal!
These answers regarding Birth Control are wrong and misinformed. You CAN get pregnant while taking birth control pills as they are only 99% effective. There is also no medical proof that continuing to take the pill while pregnant (unknowingly of course) will harm the foetus.
Some women do spot or bleed while taking birth control pills, particularly the pills that prevent a period for 3 months. However, if the bleeding is heavy or painful, you should talk to your doctor about it because there could be something else going on.
Yes, stopping birth control pills will cause bleeding.
The hormonal birth control pill suppresses your menstrual cycles to stop ovulation, also stopping menstruation. When you stop taking the pills the drop in synthetic hormones triggers a withdrawal bleed, this is the bleed you normally get once per month on the placebo pills. If you miss a pill or stop the pills midway through the pack you will get a withdrawal bleed too.
yes, it is just as if you are now having a period. when you start again the bleeding will stop.
The following will cause early bleeding: * Irregular period * Pregnancy * UTI * Hormonal Imbalance * Stopping birth control * Starting birth control
Yes it is possible to experience an irregular menstral cycle when you discontinue taking birth control. This is because when you take birth control it actually regulates your period. By stopping birth control you may experience breakthrough bleeding. Breakthrough bleeding is when you menstruate at times when you normally would not begin your menstral cycle. Breakthrough bleeding can possibly last for up to a full period or longer. Stopping birth control may also stop your period for a month or longer or you may not receive your period around the normal time of which you used to when you were taking your birth control.It depends sometimes you're period gets normal after birth control but sometimes it may still keep being irregular. It depends on the person and or pills
Stopping the birth control pill could unmask the fact that your body was done ovulating, but couldn't cause menopause.
Birth control pills should stop your menstrual bleeding. I would suggest you stop the pills and talk to your doctor
all birth control methods apart fom condoms can cause irregular break through bleeding. it is normal
On hormonal birth control your menstrual cycle is suppressed, as you no longer ovulate you no longer menstruate, instead women get a withdrawal bleed due to the drop in synthetic hormones when going from active to inactive pills or stopping the pills. If you come off hormonal birth control then it can take a few months for your menstrual cycles to return thus it can cause irregular or absent bleeding.
Yes the bleeding experienced while taking the inactive pill is not a period, it is withdrawal bleeding caused by hormones dropping. Stopping the pill mid-pack will cause the same withdrawal bleeding. Your periods will resume after your uterine lining starts building up and shedding - if you are not pregnant. It takes 4 to 6 weeks from the end of a packet - stopping mid cycle will cause spotting but should not delay your cycle from returning.
You should take birth control on schedule regardless of bleeding. Hormonal birth control can sometimes cause a missed period.
If you are having leg pain you should see a doctor because birth control can cause blood clots and they are painful and very dangerous if not treated. Leg pain is not a sign of birth control withdrawal.
Hi, You shouldn't be bleeding for weeks after this incident. See your doctor and change birth control pill. It most likely isn't the correct pill for you.
All forms of birth control can cause breakthrough bleeding without proper use, or while your body is still adjusting to it. Talk to your doctor or pharmasist for more info.
It's possible that breakthrough bleeding could occur as result of taking birth control pills.