Saturday, January 16, 2010

Wheres Your Cervix While On The Pill Where Should Your Cervix Be?

While on the pill where should your cervix be? - wheres your cervix

I hear of this positioning of the uterus in women who are trying to concieve and I asked earlier if cervical changes when the pill and all said no, it does not. So, where is it? low and closed?

3 comments:

monkeyun... said...

This is what happens:

Hormonal changes in your body during ovulation are responsible for these changes in the cervix. It is a particularly fertile when the mucus becomes clear, smooth and elastic, like raw egg white. You can changes in the cervix by obtaining samples of secretions from the cervix length, the outer lips of her external genitalia () and show between 2 fingers (thumb and index finger) spread for, consistency. To investigate changes in cervical mucus can help you, your chances of getting pregnant.

As your cycle continues, the show marked a change in the cervical mucus and changes increased volume and texture. Immediately after menstruation, the cervix begins to appear dry, brittle and closed when it touches. In this phase, after menstruation, there is little or no discharge present. They feel dryness around your vulva. During this time, you will not understand the rule in the situation.

Before ovulation and during ovulation, you can feel the cervixs very high open and wet. Cervical secretions occurs first, wet or sticky, black or cream. In the test finger, easily break the mucus. Only you can pull your fingers about 1 cm apart before it breaks. During this transition period, first the mucus will be cloudy and slightly elastic in the examination of the fingers (ie, breaks, before the fingers are stretched all the way). The more time passes, the mucus is the largest volume.

Immediately after ovulation the cervix is back in the dryer, lower, closed state observed after menstruation. During pregnancy, a closed collar and blue. The cervical mucus also tends to change in this phase of the cycle. The cervical mucus by hormonal fluctuations and increases blood flow to the uterus.

katysru1... said...

I recommend the next time you will see a doctor, she asked to view images. Since the pill has absolutely nothing to do with the positioning of the cervix.

every1's friend said...

The pill prevents ovulation (that is, when the egg is released from the ovary), she moves around her body. The normal position of the cervix is low in the uterus.

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