• Norgur
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    196 months ago

    Yep.

    Firstly: Disregarding the discomfort of having to see the doctor and having something shoved inside your body is a weird mistake, especially men tend to make regularly when talking about those things. Having your genitals exposed to and then painfully tampered with by what is ultimately a stranger isn’t a thing most people would describe as a pleasant afternoon activity.

    The side effects aren’t just from hormones. Imagine having to do a prostate exam every 6 months and a metal plug shoved close to your prostate through your urethra every few years (not the same, of course, just an attempt at an analogy, since men are one hole short down there). Wouldn’t you dislike that? Many women are really sensitive around their cervix and implanting the IUD can therefore be really painful.

    Secondly: Period cramps increase in severity, bleeding increases for most people, and there are hints that those IUDs can increase the risk for cysts, which in turn cause issues, pain and sometimes need surgical removal.

    • SaltySalamander
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      6 months ago

      Period cramps increase in severity, bleeding increases for most people

      The two women I dated that had an implanted IUD legit didn’t have a period anymore. So not only was the bleeding and cramps not worse, they simply didn’t exist.

      You honestly seem to just trying to be pushing some agenda, possibly because you had a bad experience and you’re assuming that’s just the way it is for everyone, when the reality is it’s pretty rare.

      • Norgur
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        6 months ago
        1. why is your experience the norm and what I say “pretty rare” not the other way around? Or do you consider “two women I know” a representative group? Are “two women I knew” more significant than what professionals will tell you?

        Paragard side effects can include:

        spotting between periods
        
        irregular periods
        
        heavier or longer periods
        
        more or worse cramping during your periods
        
        pain when your IUD is put in, and cramping or back aches for a few days after 
        

        https://www.plannedparenthood.org/learn/birth-control/iud/iud-side-effects

        1. Was that a copper IUD (which was what I wrote about) or a hormonal IUD?
      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        Periods going away or getting lighter is a side affect of hormonal IUDs. Copper IUDs have no mechanism to make them go away, and seem to pretty commonly make cramps and bleeding worse. .