Periods or menstruation is a normal physiological process occurring in a female body. In general a regular menstruation lasts for 4-6 days and occurs anywhere between every 28-35 days. A period may be considered irregular if the menses does not start even after 35 days or if the periods occur at irregular gaps of different number of days each time.
When should you call a period irregular?
You may consider you are having irregular periods if you are experiencing any or all of the following:
Variation in duration - Each period is of different duration, longer or shorter.
Variation in flow - No fixed pattern of flow. Flow varying between heavy, light, and very light with each period.
Bleeding on your non-period days.
Variation in pain - You experience severe pain on some of your period and mild pain on some.
Experiencing new changes - You have started experiencing new changes (premenstrual symptoms) with your periods which you otherwise did not experience earlier.
What are the symptoms of irregular periods?
Gap between one menstrual cycle to the next extending beyond 35 days
Missing 3 or more than 3 periods consecutively
Heavy bleeding with spotting or clots
Abdominal cramps
Backache
What are the causes of irregular periods?
Hormonal imbalance
Polycystic ovarian syndrome
Structural causes such as polyps, uterine fibroids, endometriosis, etc
Using contraceptive pills
Obesity
Stress
Lifestyle changes – sedentary lifestyle and unhealthy food habits
Thyroid disorders
Radioactive iodine therapy-induced
What is the treatment for irregular periods?
The treatment for irregular periods depends on the type of irregularity and factors such as planning pregnancy.
Treatment for absent or infrequent periods
Oral contraceptive pills
Cyclic progestin (a type of progesterone)
Treating the underlying cause
Treatment for heavy or prolonged menstrual bleeding
Intrauterine hormone-releasing device insertion
NSAIDs
Medications containing progestin or tranexamic acid
Treatment for painful periods (dysmenorrhea)
Heat pad application to the abdomen
NSAIDs and pain relievers
Oral contraceptives
Treatment for structural causes
Surgical treatment which may include removal of uterine fibroids or polyps, uterine artery embolization, endometrial ablation, or hysterectomy.
When should you consider consulting a doctor for your irregular periods?
Three or more missed periods in the year
Frequent periods (periods at a gap of less than 21 days)
Unnaturally heavy bleeding during periods
Bleeding persists for longer than 7 days
A word of caution - Irregular periods are a cause of concern and it is important to consult your doctor if the symptoms are persistent and too severe to manage.
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