Scientists have now found that women who skip their menstrual cycle through contraceptive pills or other methods are less likely to develop cancers related to the female reproductive system.
Scientists have now found that women who skip their menstrual cycle through contraceptive pills or other methods are less likely to develop cancers related to the female reproductive system such as cervical cancer, uterine cancer, ovarian cancer.
Though the common perception is that regular menses means 'a good cleanout' but too much menstruation could cause several diseases including breast, ovarian and endometrial cancers, says Professor Ian Fraser, a professor of reproductive medicine at Australia's University of Sydney.The fewer periods a woman has the better, he says, reported ABC science online.
'In our society women have many more periods than in primitive societies and each menstrual cycle leads to big swings in the ovarian hormones estrogen and progesterone.'
According to Fraser, this over stimulates the reproductive organs and the breasts.
'The uterus, lining of the uterus and breasts were not designed to cope with this and it causes some cells to grow and regress each month, which means a greater chance of error in the proliferation process of abnormal cells,' he says.
In our society, girls menstruate earlier and women have more periods before giving birth.
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Edited IANS