metrorrhagia
metrorrhagiaMenometrorrhagia is flow that is excessive in the amount and timing. Metrorrhagia is excessive number of days, and menorrhagia is excessive flow.
No, you would obviously no longer menstruate after you've have a hysterectomy. A hysterectomy is where the uterus is removed, if you have no uterus then you have no uterus to shed (menstruation).
No, a woman cannot still have menstrual periods after a hysterectomy. Menstruation is the shedding of the uterine lining, if there's no more uterus there's no more menstruation.
Between each ovulation, the lining the uterus is shed in the menstrual cycle. If the egg is fertilized, no further ovulation occurs and no menstrual shedding happens.
Women have menstrual periods because this is a part of our reproductive cycle. Every cycle we ovulate and the uterus builds-up to prepare for possible pregnancy to care for the fetus, if a woman doesn't fall pregnant then the uterus lining sheds so it can start a fresh next cycle.
It is controlled by the uterus. That is where the uterus lining is which causes the menstrual cycle
No, a urinary track infection doesn't stop you from having menstrual periods. Menstruation is controlled by your menstrual cycle, hormonal changes throughout your reproductive organs, it has absolutely nothing to do with your urinary tract or bladder.
Your uterus doesn't know what a calendar is, let alone how to use this man-made device to measure time. When you menstruate is determined by your menstrual cycle, when you menstruate depends on the length of your menstrual cycle and not by the date on the calendar.
To prepone menstrual dates naturally some people use herbal remedies. To avoid menstrual periods one only needs to put oneself in an extremely stressful environment but it is extremely unhealthy to do so as the menstrual period is required to remove the unused lining inside the uterus.
Dysmennorrhea, or menstrual cramps, are caused by excessive levels of prostaglandins, hormones which cause the uterus to contract. It can also be caused by endometriosis, STD's or Pelvic Inflammatory Disease.
No. Only humans and closely related species such as chimpanzees have a period or menstrual cycle. Other mammals that have a placenta have a similar oestrous cycle, where the lining of the uterus is built up in case of pregnancy over a specific time cycle, but they don't shed the lining of the uterus as blood in the way humans do, they simply reabsorb the unused uterus.
Menstrual flow is the uterus lining shedding, so it originates in the uterus and would leave the uterus via the cervix. The cervix is at the top of the vaginal canal, the vaginal canal then is the passageway through which the menstrual flow passes.