Hello. I just read your post and was wondering and hoping that you found an answer and wouldn't mind sharing. Thanks
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Try making paste of fresh corriander and lemon. Then drink it with warm water in empty stomach in the morning close to the time of ur period for 5 days. Helps the blood to thin and uterus to shed and less cramps. And good for weight loss.
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Use cinnamon capsules to stop bleeding. Also yarrow is good for severe bleeding too.
Red raspberry shrink fibroids and control hormones. There is an herb I buy on Amazon for hypothyroidism they work pretty well they are called thyroid support...these herbs are not expensive at all
Red raspberry shrink fibroids and control hormones. There is an herb I buy on Amazon for hypothyroidism they work pretty well they are called thyroid support...these herbs are not expensive at all
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i been on my period for almost 2 months now and i am terribly scared i dont have sex and im only 18 i have been stressing lately but today i had a gigantic blood clot come out of me and it was bigger than a golf ball.
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I am currently experiencing very bad clots during my period. I literally can not get off the toilet for upto half an hour sometimes because I will pass clots as soon as I stand up. They also don't pass very easily and sometimes are just stuck. Sorry for tmi! I notice your post was a while ago now and wondered if you have had any luck in curing your problems, any help would be seriously appreciated.
My doctor has me on the pill atm but I'm still waiting to see if it helps.
Many thanks.
My doctor has me on the pill atm but I'm still waiting to see if it helps.
Many thanks.
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My family has had a string of severe cramps and each of us had some sort of growth/sits in our ovaries. My grandmother had hers removed when the sist cause her ovarie to pop. She wasn't supposed to have children but somehow did. I would go for an ultra sound to check for sists but some doctors you go to will just let them pop so I would find a doctor willing to ultra sound you
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I'm having the same problem, had surgery and everything. And its still happening. Its very painful cramps. And the having to run to the bathroom every time you feel it coming out, its crazy. I too try n push them out, sometimes they do sometimes they don't.
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Can I just make that point the having children ABSOLUTLY DOES NOT MAKE YOU IMMUNE TO ENDOMETREOSIS!!! I have two children and have it. My friend had three children and just underwent a full hysterectomy due to ENDOMETREOSIS. If that's what your gyn is telling you then you need to find a new one.
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You can still get endometriosis after having kids. I've worked at a OB/GYN office and it does happen
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I have small pieces of liver coming out of me should I go to the doctor because if scared!
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Nope. I have been having sever pain during my cycles. I had my first child and started birth control after and 7 yrs later got pregnant again now I'm not on any birth control because after my second child I got my tubes tied! My cycles are just as bad as they were before! So my dr put me back on birth control to stop my periods from being so heavy. Got s blood clot in my leg so now I'm back off. But I just had a clot to come out of me that felt so weird it's kind of scary. But yeah I have 2 kids n still bad cycles!! But everyone is different
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Yep pretty much my life!!! But I gain a blood clot in my leg so they took me off birth control. And now they are going to burned the lining of my uterus so I won't have a cycle anymore nor have any more kids!
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Hi folks! Seems like there are a lot of us in similar situations. I wanted to share my story as it might help someone.
I got my period when I was 10. From the start it has been heavy and painful. From the age of about 16 I started passing liver like clots, usually on day three of my period. This caused lots of pain and always freaked me out.
By age 19 I was sick of having zero life one week of four and went to see the doctor about my periods. I was dismissed and sent home with a prescription for paracetamol.
By age 20 I was on the pill. This helped reduce the bleeding and I skipped a lot of periods as a result. However I still had cramps.
By 27 I spent two years trying to get pregnant. Nothing happened, but being off the pill brought back a whole new world of pain. I noticed I was inexplicably tired (but never anaemic, I was tested repeatedly) and felt nauseous, particularly in the morning. This wasn't pregnancy as I never had a positive test but these symptoms continued.
When I was 30 I got the mirena put in to try and stop the horror show that my periods had become. The bleeding lessened but I got even worse cramps, at all sorts of different times. The fatigue persisted (but still was not anaemia) as did the nausea. These symptoms got progressively worse over time until a new symptom joined the party: excruciating pain on my right side that came out of nowhere, put my body into shock and lasted about an hour.
Finally, at 33 I went to my doctor (different one to paracetamol guy) and told him what was happening. He ordered me an ultrasound. They found a mass that was the size of a baseball to the right side of my uterus. This led to an MRI which revealed multiple large fibroids: three on stàlks off the side, 4-5 in the lining of my uterus and 2-3 hanging inside my uterus. I was also leaking through my uterine wall into my abdominal cavity, causing the nausea and vomiting.
Right now I am 33 and six days post-op for a sub-total abdominal hysterectomy. There was no other option as my uterus was so riddled and my health was so compromised by the situation. I also wasn't fussed about having babies, which helped.
The thing is, if I had been a lot more assertive and insistent on getting checked out sooner, perhaps I would still have a uterus. Or, it would have been caught before it totally ruined my health and I needed to take three months off work. I think that too often we are told that really nasty symptoms are "normal" and just "part of being a woman". I don't accept that. I'm not here to scaremonger but to encourage folks to advocate for yourself. You shouldn't necessarily have to suffer. Just because nobody else can see or feel what you are going through each month does NOT mean it's in your head. Trust your instincts about your body, get it checked and reclaim your life! It's inly been six days since I kissed my uterus goodbye and I feel like a brand new woman.
Hang in there folks. You deserve better.
I got my period when I was 10. From the start it has been heavy and painful. From the age of about 16 I started passing liver like clots, usually on day three of my period. This caused lots of pain and always freaked me out.
By age 19 I was sick of having zero life one week of four and went to see the doctor about my periods. I was dismissed and sent home with a prescription for paracetamol.
By age 20 I was on the pill. This helped reduce the bleeding and I skipped a lot of periods as a result. However I still had cramps.
By 27 I spent two years trying to get pregnant. Nothing happened, but being off the pill brought back a whole new world of pain. I noticed I was inexplicably tired (but never anaemic, I was tested repeatedly) and felt nauseous, particularly in the morning. This wasn't pregnancy as I never had a positive test but these symptoms continued.
When I was 30 I got the mirena put in to try and stop the horror show that my periods had become. The bleeding lessened but I got even worse cramps, at all sorts of different times. The fatigue persisted (but still was not anaemia) as did the nausea. These symptoms got progressively worse over time until a new symptom joined the party: excruciating pain on my right side that came out of nowhere, put my body into shock and lasted about an hour.
Finally, at 33 I went to my doctor (different one to paracetamol guy) and told him what was happening. He ordered me an ultrasound. They found a mass that was the size of a baseball to the right side of my uterus. This led to an MRI which revealed multiple large fibroids: three on stàlks off the side, 4-5 in the lining of my uterus and 2-3 hanging inside my uterus. I was also leaking through my uterine wall into my abdominal cavity, causing the nausea and vomiting.
Right now I am 33 and six days post-op for a sub-total abdominal hysterectomy. There was no other option as my uterus was so riddled and my health was so compromised by the situation. I also wasn't fussed about having babies, which helped.
The thing is, if I had been a lot more assertive and insistent on getting checked out sooner, perhaps I would still have a uterus. Or, it would have been caught before it totally ruined my health and I needed to take three months off work. I think that too often we are told that really nasty symptoms are "normal" and just "part of being a woman". I don't accept that. I'm not here to scaremonger but to encourage folks to advocate for yourself. You shouldn't necessarily have to suffer. Just because nobody else can see or feel what you are going through each month does NOT mean it's in your head. Trust your instincts about your body, get it checked and reclaim your life! It's inly been six days since I kissed my uterus goodbye and I feel like a brand new woman.
Hang in there folks. You deserve better.
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