Listed below
is a rough outline for a regular cycle. Many women experience irregular
menstrual cycles. You can tell if you have an irregular cycle if
your period comes sporadically. Although this is natural, especially
for younger women, you might want to talk to your provider to make
sure your cycle isn’t affected by another condition. Some women
use birth control pills to even out their cycles, which can also
control symptoms of PMS.
The first day of the cycle is the day your
period starts. Of course, this won’t happen if the egg was
fertilized, because that means you’re pregnant. Otherwise,
you usually know when to expect day one (about every 28 days).
Some women experience the most severe
cramps on the first day, that’s because the uterus is contracting
to push the blood and tissue and the unfertilized egg out and through
the cervix. The bleeding will last from three to five days usually,
but anywhere between two and seven days can be expected.
The first
half of your cycle, from the start of your period until about day
14, is the “estrogen phase” because the level
of estrogen in your body is rising throughout these two weeks.
FSH is the hormone that causes estrogen to be produced by your
ovaries
as they prepare an egg for ovulation.
Toward the end of this time,
from about day 7 to day 14, the egg is growing and the estrogen
is stimulating the uterus to thicken
with blood and extra tissue.
Around day 13 to 15, you experience
ovulation. Ovulation happens when the ovaries release an egg in
response to a luteinizing hormone
surge from the pituitary gland in your brain. Some women are in
tune with their bodies enough to sense ovulation, perhaps through
mittleshmerz
(cramps) or a very slight rise in body temperature. The egg travels
through the fallopian tubes and toward the uterus. When the egg
is in the fallopian tubes, fertilization is most likely. After
ovulation,
progesterone is produced.
The second phase of your period is called
the “progesterone
phase.” That means the cycle is now controlled by the hormone
progesterone. The uterus continues to prepare for pregnancy. This
is the time when you are most prone to PMS symptoms, the hormones
are increasing up until around the time the unfertilized egg is
expelled from your body. The egg eventually gets to the uterus,
and if it
isn’t fertilized, then day one arrives once again. |