Understanding Your Menstrual Cycle – What Your Period Says About Your Health

Your menstrual cycle is more than just your period. It’s a sophisticated hormonal symphony that reflects your overall health. At North Delhi Uro & Gynae Clinic, we help women understand their menstrual cycle and recognize when something needs attention.

The Menstrual Cycle: Basic Facts

Average Cycle Length: 21-35 days (average 28 days) Menstrual Period Duration: 2-7 days (average 5 days) Menstrual Flow: 30-40 mL per period (average) Hormone Levels: Fluctuate throughout cycle

What’s “Normal” Varies: – Individual variation is huge – Your normal may differ from others – Consistency matters (same pattern each month) – Changes from your baseline warrant investigation

The Four Phases of the Menstrual Cycle

Phase 1: Menstruation (Days 1-5 of cycle)

What Happens: – Uterine lining sheds – Blood, tissue, and fluid expelled – Duration: Average 3-7 days – Bleeding gradually decreases

Hormonal Status: – Estrogen: Low – Progesterone: Low – FSH: Beginning to rise – LH: Beginning to rise

Symptoms You May Experience: – Cramping (dysmenorrhea) – Bloating – Mood changes – Fatigue – Backache – Headache – Tender breasts

What’s Normal: – Bright red bleeding (may darken) – Passage of small clots – Flow heaviest first 2 days, tapering – Total blood loss 30-40 mL (less than 1/4 cup daily)

Red Flags (See Doctor): – Bleeding lasting >7 days – Soaking through 1+ pads per hour for several hours – Passage of large clots (>quarter size) – Severe pain – Systemic symptoms (fever, chills)

Phase 2: Follicular Phase (Days 1-13 of typical 28-day cycle)

What Happens: – Pituitary releases FSH – FSH stimulates ovaries to produce follicles – Follicles produce estrogen – Endometrium begins thickening – Cervical mucus becomes wetter

Hormonal Changes: – FSH: Rising – Estrogen: Gradually increasing – Progesterone: Low – LH: Starts rising at phase end

Energy and Mood: – Energy levels increase – Mood improves – Confidence increases – Mental clarity improves

Physical Changes: – Skin may improve – Cervical mucus increases – Cervix rises and softens – Libido may increase

Duration: – Typically 13-14 days – Shorter in women with short cycles – Longer in women with long cycles

Phase 3: Ovulation (Days 13-14 of typical cycle)

What Triggers Ovulation: – Estrogen reaches critical threshold – Triggers LH surge – LH surge triggers ovulation – Egg released 24-36 hours after LH surge

Hormonal Peak: – LH: Surge (most dramatic change) – Estrogen: Peak – FSH: Secondary surge – Progesterone: Beginning to rise

Fertile Window: – Starts 5 days before ovulation – Ends day after ovulation – Sperm can survive 3-5 days – Egg survives 12-24 hours – Intercourse every 2-3 days covers window

Ovulation Symptoms: – Mittelschmerz: Brief pain/cramps in lower abdomen – Cervical mucus peak (egg white consistency) – Slight temperature rise (detectable next day) – Breast tenderness – Increased libido – Slight mood elevation

Ovulation Prediction: – Ovulation predictor kits (detect LH surge) – Cervical mucus monitoring – Temperature tracking – Calendar method (less reliable) – Ultrasound monitoring (most accurate)

Phase 4: Luteal Phase (Days 15-28 of typical cycle)

What Happens: – Empty follicle transforms to corpus luteum – Corpus luteum produces progesterone – Progesterone maintains endometrium – If no pregnancy, progesterone declines – Low progesterone triggers period

Hormonal Changes: – Progesterone: Rising then falling – Estrogen: Secondary rise then fall – LH and FSH: Low

Early Luteal Phase (Days 15-21): – Progesterone rising – Egg either fertilizing or degenerating – Energy high – Mood stable – Well-being

Late Luteal Phase (Days 22-28): Premenstrual Phase

Hormonal Changes: – Progesterone declining – Estrogen declining – Trigger for menstrual symptoms

Physical Symptoms: – Breast tenderness/swelling – Bloating – Weight gain (water retention) – Fatigue – Appetite increase (cravings) – Constipation or diarrhea – Headaches – Body aches

Mood Symptoms: – Irritability – Anxiety – Depression – Mood swings – Reduced patience – Sleep changes (too much or too little)

This is Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS): – Affects 75% of menstruating women – Moderate-severe symptoms: 25-30% – Typically starts 5-7 days before period – Resolves within 24 hours of period starting – Cyclical pattern is key feature

Severe Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD): – 3-8% of menstruating women – Debilitating mood/behavioral changes – Requires medical treatment – Different from PMS

Understanding Irregular Periods

Causes of Irregular Periods:

Hormonal Imbalances: – PCOS (most common) – Thyroid disorders – Prolactin elevation – Cortisol dysregulation

Reproductive Issues: – Uterine fibroids – Polyps – Adenomyosis – Intrauterine adhesions

Lifestyle Factors: – Extreme exercise – Low body weight – Rapid weight gain – Stress – Sleep deprivation – Lifestyle changes

Medical Conditions: – Diabetes – Bleeding disorders – Coagulopathy

Medications: – Hormonal contraceptives (can regulate or cause irregularity) – Antipsychotics – Anticoagulants – Corticosteroids

Life Stages: – Menarche (first period): Often irregular for 2-3 years – Perimenopause: Increasingly irregular – Pregnancy and postpartum: Disrupted cycling – Breastfeeding: Amenorrhea common

When Irregular Periods Warrant Evaluation

Consult Dr. Anju Bala For: – Sudden change from your normal pattern – Cycles <21 or >35 days consistently – Periods lasting >7 days – Heavy bleeding (soaking pads) – Amenorrhea (absent periods for 3+ months) – Breakthrough bleeding between periods – Postmenopausal bleeding – Painful periods interfering with activities – Concerning cycle changes

Diagnostic Evaluation

History and Physical: – Detailed menstrual history – Symptom assessment – Weight and lifestyle changes – Stress assessment – Medication review – Family history

Laboratory Tests: – Thyroid function (TSH) – Prolactin level – Testosterone (if signs of excess) – Pelvic ultrasound for structural issues – Hemoglobin (if heavy bleeding)

Imaging: – Transvaginal ultrasound – Hysteroscopy (if intrauterine pathology suspected)

Treatment of Irregular Periods

Lifestyle Modifications: – Regular exercise (not excessive) – Stress management – Adequate sleep – Healthy weight – Nutrition optimization – Limit caffeine and alcohol

Hormonal Treatments: – Birth control pills (regulate cycles) – Hormonal IUD – Progestin therapy – Other hormonal options

Treatment of Underlying Cause: – PCOS management – Thyroid treatment – Weight normalization – Surgical removal of fibroids/polyps

Tracking Your Menstrual Cycle

Why Track? – Identify your baseline normal – Spot pattern changes early – Predict fertile window – Manage PMS symptoms – Share accurate information with doctor

What to Track: – Period start and end dates – Flow (light, medium, heavy) – Symptoms (cramps, mood, energy) – Ovulation signs – Any other notable changes

Tracking Methods: – Calendar or planner – Smartphone apps (Flo, Clue, Period Tracker) – Spreadsheet – Doctor-provided charts

Menstrual Cycle and Overall Health

The Cycle Reflects Health: – Regular cycles: Generally healthy – Irregular cycles: May indicate underlying issues – Cycle changes: Important diagnostic clues

Cycle and Fitness: – Training response varies by cycle phase – Follicular: Better for intense training – Luteal: Better for endurance, strength maintenance

Cycle and Nutrition: – Nutritional needs vary by phase – Iron needs increase during menstruation – Carbohydrate tolerance may vary – Caloric needs may increase luteal phase

Cycle and Mental Health: – Mood naturally fluctuates with cycle – Stress exacerbates PMS symptoms – Mental health affects cycle regularity – Treatment of mood disorders may help cycles

Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) Management

Lifestyle Approaches: – Regular exercise (reduces symptoms 50%) – Calcium supplementation (1,000-1,200 mg daily) – Vitamin D (2,000 IU daily) – Vitamin B6 (50-100 mg daily) – Magnesium supplementation – Reduce caffeine and salt – Adequate sleep

Medical Treatment: – SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors): – Luteal phase dosing most effective – Sertraline, fluoxetine, paroxetine options – 60% symptom improvement

  • Combined oral contraceptives (extended cycle):
    • Reduce hormonal fluctuations
    • Lighten or eliminate periods
    • Options for eliminating withdrawal bleeds
  • Diuretics:
    • For bloating and fluid retention
    • Spironolactone effective

Tracking and Timing: – Predict symptom onset – Plan important activities outside PMS window – Adjust work/social schedule if needed

What Dr. Anju Bala Recommends

“Understanding your menstrual cycle is key to women’s health. Every woman should know her baseline normal, track changes, and seek evaluation when something shifts. Your period is a vital sign—it tells us about your reproductive, hormonal, and overall health. Pay attention to it.”

The Bottom Line

Your menstrual cycle is a window into your health. By understanding what’s normal for you, tracking changes, and seeking appropriate evaluation when needed, you can optimize your health and catch problems early.

Get to know your cycle. It knows you.

Contact North Delhi Uro & Gynae Clinic: – Address: C-5, Model Town 3, New Delhi 110009 – Phone: 9910118030 – Doctor: Dr. Anju Bala (MBBS, MD, DNB) – Obstetrician & Gynaecologist

Understand your body. Empower your health.

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