Both do.
the uterine lining thickens to allow an embryo to implant. The reason it thickens is to allow room for blood vessels to supply the area with oxygenated blood. if a child doesn't implant, then it's just superfluous preparation, and the cycle starts again.
It's still just menstrual fluid. This happens a day or so before you really start bleeding, and it tends to be brown at the end of your period. Older blood turns brown. Your period is more than blood. It's totally normal.
yes if your blood flows faster more white blood cells will be there to stop the blood coming from the cut after that its just if you re luckyto heal all the way
It definitely can. It means that your egg is only just burrowing into your uterine lining. This can be the result of late ovulation or fertilization. I know a few women that had implantation bleeding at the time their period was due, so it's definitely a possibility.
as a period for Lady's and by getting hurt for men
Its coming its just coming kinda late. Brown discharge is blood its just old blood which is why its brown. Its kinda like the beginning of your period when you have brown discharge, that is how mine starts.
She bleeds out her vagine women have their period because their uterus is shedding its old lining. the blood is basically just dead skin cells
jK its normal... its just old blood coming out instead of new blood
If you're not pregnant, then no. It is not a miscarriage. Your period is just screwing up.
Some periods contain the lining of the uterus, some periods seem to only have..blood. I'm experiencing the same thing, and I'm noticing that when I was on the pill, my period would be darker, and I could actually see the lining and what not. Now that I'm off of it, I actually only see blood..and its bright red.
because your uterus lining is disintegrating. the lining of your uterus and blood capillaries present in your uterus to accommodate a baby in case of fertilization is now detaching from your uterus and falling as your period.
Spotting is normal before your period, it's just the start of your period as the uterine lining starts to shed. You can also get spotting after your period, or mid-cycle spotting around the time of ovulation.
Menstrual flow isn't just blood, the blood is actually secondary to the main waste material: uterine tissue. Basically the chunks are pieces of the uterine lining itself, or may be lumps of bloody mucus.
It just means that your flow is coming out heavy. Blood has a product called fibrinogen in it and that dissolves clots. If the flow is heavy then fibrinogen doesn't have enough time to act on the blood which makes it clot. However if you are experiencing very heavy clots you should contact your gynecologist. The lining of your uterus is changing and that means it's also pieces of it.
Epithelial cells are the lining cells. they are not a tissue. this is to be understood first. the outermost lining is known as the epithelial cell lining. it is provided its nutrition through diffusion- indirectly through blood. BUT they DO NOT have a blood vessel supply, since they are not an organ/tissue, just a cell lining.
Menstrual flow is not just blood, it's the shedding of the lining of the uterus. Sometimes you'll notice other components of this lining, particularly when progesterone levels are higher.
This could just be your uterine lining coming away which is normal, it just came away after your period instead of with it.