Yes, irregular bleeding or spotting is a common side effect of the contraceptive implant.
Bleeding is a side effect of the contraceptive implant. It can also be a sign of infection. See your health care provider to make sure the bleeding doesn't have another cause.
Spotting or bleeding, brown or red, is a common side effect of the contraceptive implant.
The contraceptive implant does not cause infertility. 15 in 100 patients will not get pregnant in the first year after stopping the implant. THat's the same rate as patients who've never used the implant.
The contraceptive implant does not affect the health of a pregnancy or cause miscarriage.
Bleeding in early pregnancy is common, but you should contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation. The recent removal of the contraceptive implant does not cause bleeding in pregnancy.
Cause your are abnormal.
The contraceptive implant does not cause miscarriage or harm a pregnancy. While pregnancy is very rare on the implant, a patient who is pregnant on the implant can continue or terminate the pregnancy as she chooses.
Yes. Along with abnormal uterine bleeding.
The risk of birth defects is no higher for those few women who get pregnant on implanon than it is for other women.
The word "abnormal" in your question should prompt you to seek help from a medical professional. Weekly bleeding is NEVER normal.
Abnormal vaginal bleeding can be treated with medication to stop the bleeding and then contraceptives maybe required to reset their normal cycle. A woman with bleeding that carries on after medication will require further investigative procedures to find out the cause.