Yes, of course the morning after pill will affect your menstrual cycle - that's the whole point in taking it! The purpose of the morning after pill is to delay ovulation or prevent ovulation, thus can prevent or delay menstruation, the sudden rise and drop in hormones can also result in a withdrawal bleed.
This is normal after using the morning after pill. The emergency contraception works primarily by either preventing ovulation or can also cause uterine lining to shed early. As it stops or delays ovulation then it can stop or delay menstruation, and it can take around three months for your body to adjust to get back into a regular cycle.
You must take the "pill" as prescribed. You cannot artificially alter your ovulation dates by taking more or less of "the pill."
While on the pill you don't have an ovulation cycle - the pill prevents ovulation. Once off the pill you can start tracking ovulation by cervical mucus changes and charting your menstrual cycle. Ovulation happens about 14 days prior to menstruation.
no it does not it says in the information that it keeps the sperm from reaching the egg (it kills the sperm not the egg)
Yes it is possible. If you are worried you might be pregnant for about $16 - $30 you can get the morning after pill from the chemist without prescription. The morning after pill can be taken 72 hours after unprotected sex. The morning after pill is not an abortion pill and will not do anything if you are already pregnant - it will prevent you becoming pregnant, the same way the pill would if you took that.
Ovulation normally returns 2-4 weeks after the last pill regardless of how long a woman has been taking the pill. If her periods were irregular prior to using the pill, they are likely to resume their irregular pattern when she stops the pill.
No, the pill stops ovulation.
i think you must take contraceptive pill because it prevents ovulation .
It is possible for a morning after pill to cause a disruption in the normal menstrual cycle, but it depends upon the pill taken. One of the most common is Levonorgestrel; sometimes prescribed as l-norgestrel or d-norgestrel. Because of its use of progestogens it can lengthen the luteal phase of menstruation which in turn leads to a general delay or disruption of the normal cycle. In any event if you are concerned or if you experience a delay in your period of more than a week I reccommend seeing your physician for a check up and blood test. Over the counter pregnancy tests are not always accurate and another cause of delay could be pregnancy, which can in rare cases still occur even with the use of a "morning after pill".
i doubt anything will work as a substitute to the morning after pill, i suggest you go asap to your gp get a prescription for the mornign after pill or just go to your parmacy and get the morning after pill.
You can because nothing is 100% effective in preventing it. but with birth control yes you can, but with morning after pill you have a chance of getting pregnant. but it can cause nothing to happen.