Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first period after my second dose was about a week late. The following two came right on time.
Why is this a big deal?
I had the same issue when my grandmother died, both times I had major surgery my period started early when it wasn’t due yet, and it was about three weeks late in 2018 when I had flu A. It’s not unusual to have a strange cycle when your body is under stress or your immune system is busy working on something else.
Having a strange cycle or two means absolutely nothing in terms of your general health or fertility. I can see why it’s surprising for some, but I don’t understand why we need to keep starting discussions about it. It’s expected. It’s normal. It’s harmless. Move on.
This. People are freaking out about nothing. Your immune system is ramped up. Your body thinks you are fighting an illness. It changes your menstrual cycle. Normal.
Anonymous wrote:My first period after my second dose was about a week late. The following two came right on time.
Why is this a big deal?
I had the same issue when my grandmother died, both times I had major surgery my period started early when it wasn’t due yet, and it was about three weeks late in 2018 when I had flu A. It’s not unusual to have a strange cycle when your body is under stress or your immune system is busy working on something else.
Having a strange cycle or two means absolutely nothing in terms of your general health or fertility. I can see why it’s surprising for some, but I don’t understand why we need to keep starting discussions about it. It’s expected. It’s normal. It’s harmless. Move on.
Anonymous wrote:Did the trials not include many pre-menopausal women? I've heard so many stories about period-related side effects.
Anonymous wrote:Did the trials not include many pre-menopausal women? I've heard so many stories about period-related side effects.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who woke up the night of her second Pfizer shot with unbearable pain. She went to the ER and it turned out to be a ruptured uterine cyst. Obviously I don’t think the vaccine caused the cyst, but bc of the timing it does make me wonder if the vaccine was somehow related to do with the rupture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think periods and hormones are so poorly understood or considered by most medical researchers and that’s a shame.
I remember when I had a fall with a head injury and torn muscle that my period started out of the blue and was heavy/abnormal for months afterwards. My OB looked at me like I was nuts for suggesting the two were linked and pushed for me to either get an ablation (!) or go back on BC which i had been off for ten years because of severe migraines and concern about stroke.
Anyway, I found a different doctor who listened and suggested cyclic progesterone therapy to get things back on track for a few months. Fixed the problem, and I don’t have PCOS.
I think everyone should get this vaccine, but I also think scientist should test vaccines on women who menstruate naturally, without BC, just to study it! There is a lot to be gained for women’s health.
Hear, hear!
Anonymous wrote:I apologize if this was posted already; I didn't read the entire thread.
Our survey was approved and made it through production! VACCINATED MENSTRUATORS ASSEMBLE:
https://is.gd/pd_vax
(This is a project to explore whether the covid vaxes affect the periods - if you have menstruated before and got the vax, take 15 min to tell us your experiences!)
https://twitter.com/KateClancy/status/1379847815636135941