Can a Woman still gain her extent...?
Answer:
Yes. In fact, birth control pills are designed to do a short time ago that: prevent ovulation while allowing menstruation. If the question is do women still obtain periods after menopause, the answer is yes for a outstandingly short time thereafter.
The quick answer is, “ Yes, sort of," but the more biologically correct answer is that you can go amiss to ovulate, but still have anovulatory bleeding. Technically speaking, a length is the bleeding that occurs give or take a few 12 to 16 days after the release of an egg. If no egg is released, it is not really a period that follows, but anovulatory bleeding.
There is a huge difference between cycles surrounded by which the woman ovulates but does not get her term, and one in which she get her period but does not ovulate. What is that difference? In the former valise, the woman is almost certainly pregnant. In the latter covering, she has have an anovulatory cycle.
In anovulatory cycles, non-charting women may assume they are menstruating normally, so why would they verbs to experience bleeding if ovulation has not occur? Such bleeding results when estrogen production continues to develop the uterine lining short reaching the threshold necessary to trigger ovulation. In such a casing, one of two things may happen, which lead to what appears to be a menstrual period.
Either the estrogen will build up slowly to a point below the threshold and consequently drop, resulting in "estrogen deduction bleeding," or more commonly, the endometrium builds up slowly over an extended period of time, eventually to the point where on earth the resulting uterine lining is so thicken it can no longer sustain itself. This is known as "estrogen breakthrough bleeding." In any case, if you weren't charting, you might conjecture you were simply menstruating, though you would I don`t know notice a difference within the type of bleeding. Specifically the flow can be either unusually calorific or light and as you would expect, the timing can result in cycle length all over the map (or the chart).
Period is the wrap up result of ovulation. So generally speaking, if you hold no ovulation, you will have no extent. This is what happens after menopause and since puberty.
But there are exceptions. If you be more specific, I could have given you a more specific answer.
Are u conversation about menopause or a missed interval honey?
CarolSandyToes1
there can be bleeding but not "the" bleeding