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It sounds like anovulatory bleeding, which can happen if you go months without a period. That is why certain birth control pills that you take for 3 months in a row have a break 4 times a year. It kind of lets you plan the bleeding vs coming as a surprise when you don''t really want it. It might just stop once you shed the tissue that has built up in your uterus over the last 2 years. But if it does not, or your symptoms get worse, or you get new symptoms (e.g. fevers, nausea, severe pain, heavy bleeding ect), you should be evaluated.
It would be worth putting a call into the doctor who placed the IUD to see if he/she feels this is normal or not, just to be safe. |
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My best friend has had her IUD for 3 yrs and for the last 10 months she was experiencing lots of spotting, some full blown periods, cramping, and hormonal symptoms. She just went to the doctor last week and they removed the IUD. They said it seemed as though her body began fighting off the IUD to "normalize" itself.
I don''t mean to panic you or anything, but I would get it checked. It seems that my friend''s doctor actually became concerned about pregnancy since it wasn''t working properly. Good luck. |
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