The color of the breakthrough bleeding has no medical significance. Bleeding while on the Birth Control pill may be red, brown, or black. These are all normal.
Breakthrough bleeding is normal in the first three months of use of the birth control pill. After that, it may be due to missed pills; new medications or herbal preparations; or a pill that doesn't have the right mix of hormones for you. If you haven't missed any pills, there is no special concern about pregnancy risk just because you're bleeding. If it recurs, or if you have other symptoms, see your health care provider.
Can u be pregnant if urn on urn period
It is perfectly normal to start your period weeks early and its dark brown. You mostly start with dark brown when you start your period and it turns red.
because ya a pregnant
Your preggo.
either you where to rough, or your early-- both are normal.
No, term is between 37 and 42 weeks after the last period and babies born before this are pre-term, it doesn't mean the calculation was wrong.
been on my period for 2 weeks what does that mean
if your period comes on early does that mean that you are not pregnant?
No, it just means your period isn't stable just yet. I used to have my period twice a month before I got on birth control to regulate it. It doesn't mean you're pregnant just because you're getting your period every 3 weeks instead of every 4 weeks.
Your period doesn't start early or late, it starts exactly when it is supposed to start - it's just earlier than you predicted. Anything up to a weeks variation from your average menstrual cycle is considered normal, it doesn't mean anything other than that the last cycle was shorter than average.
If you mean, How many weeks of pregnancy before birth the answer is approximately 40 weeks from the last period or 38 weeks from conception. In humans the baby is considered full term any where from 38 weeks to 42 weeks from the last period. Each individual takes slightly longer or shorter to grow a baby. Nutrition, health, heredity, and the infant are all factors effecting hte length of pregnancy. No one can scientifically predict exactly when a baby will be born.
Not necessarily. You determine how far along you are based on the first day of your last menstrual period (which is considered day 1 of week 1). For example, if the first day of your last period was January 1, you would be 2 weeks along on January 15.