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Home » Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for
Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for
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Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 2, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

It’s a code red — but what does it mean?

Knowing what’s normal when it comes to your period can be tricky. After all, women aren’t exactly chatting about the color, consistency and smell of blood at the water cooler.

But if you’re informed about what to look for, that time of the month could be a useful tool in letting you know how your reproductive system is functioning.

Hailey Puckett, a doctor of nursing practice, women’s health nurse practitioner and Kotex partner, tells The Post exactly how to read your cycle like a book.

Clots bigger than the size of a quarter

Clots are OK as long as they’re small. Bigger than the size of a quarter might indicate there could be a polyp, fibroid, endometriosis or adenomyosis.

Period consistency naturally changes over the course of each cycle, so how do you differentiate slimy blood and a clot? Puckett says clot is “anything that is not of a loose consistency that would just absorb straight onto a pad or tampon.”

She recommends using pads over tampons to keep an eye on the size. When a tampon gets changed out, it’s hard to tell how big any clot might be.

Dark, slimy blood for the duration of the period

Color, consistency, and smell naturally change over the course of a period.

First, expect dark brown or black, slimy blood with a milder smell. Then, it’ll transition into a bright red with a more metallic smell, and stay a consistent color for two to three days, Puckett says, before it tapers off.

It’s also normal for people to get a light pink to the brown again or brown to the light pink.

But that dark blood is oxidized, old blood, she explains, so it only should appear at the beginning or end. “We don’t really want it through the entire time,” she said, which would indicate the woman isn’t having a regular cycle each month.

“They might not be ovulating, they might be holding on to too much period. And you’re only letting out a little bit.”

This could be a sign of polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome (PMOS), previously known as PCOS.

Bleeding through a pad or tampon in an hour

If you’re bleeding so heavily an entire pad or tampon is saturated within the hour, it could lead to complications.

Bleeding should ebb and flow over the course of a period. It “should not be of heavy consistency the entire time” or “something that you dread,” she said.

Bleeding so much can cause anemia, a lack of red blood cells to carry oxygen around your body, fatigue and weakness. It can also be really painful.

It’s common — about 1 in 3 women deal with heavy menstrual bleeding, or menorrhagia — but that doesn’t mean you have to simply deal with it. Talk to a doctor if it’s interfering with your life.

As long as it takes longer than an hour to fill a pad or tampon, it’s OK, Puckett said.

She recommends Kotex’s Gravity Core pads that pull the blood to the bottom of the pad, so it’s not overflowing off the side before the pad is full.

Make sure you don’t wait until it’s full, either. Change every four to six hours to combat bacteria growth.

Over 38 days between periods

Your period should last six days or less. And there should be 21-38 days between the first day of your period.

“If they’re going every over 38 days, that’s a big indicator to me that they’re not having regular monthly ovulation,” Puckett said.

This could be caused by high estrogen or androgen. With PMOS, higher testosterone could cause irregular ovulation.

If you’re on an estrogen pill, patch or ring, your cycle should be regulated. In the case of the pill, three days without the hormone (three placebo pills) will cause the period to start.

For progestin pills, intrauterine device (IUD) and injection, the period may not come at all, or you could have irregular bleeding every third month, Puckett said.

“Not a concern as long as it’s not extremely bothersome,” she added.

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