Sexual Health
What are the negative effects of sexual intercourse during the menstrual period? There are many dangers to sexual intercourse during the menstrual period
During menstruation, women's body resistance is weak, and the room is prone to infection with the reproductive system. The endometrium can flow back into the pelvis, causing endometriosis, and women may not be pregnant. It is not recommended to have sexual intercourse on a physiological day to avoid the potential harm caused by sexual intercourse. Today, let's talk about the dangers of sexual intercourse during menstruation
Menstrual sexual hazards
The harm of sexual activity during menstruation is great, but some women hold a lucky mentality and cannot resist the ridicule of their male partners during this special period, engaging in dangerous sexual activities. Let's take a look at the dangers of sexual activity during menstruation.
1. Due to excitement, female genital congestion, increased menstrual flow, and prolonged menstrual period
2. Men may bring bacteria into the vagina, and menstrual blood is a good breeding ground for bacteria and other microorganisms. Bacteria are easy to reproduce and spread along many small wounds and ruptured blood vessels in the endometrium, infecting the endometrium, fallopian tubes, and pelvic organs
3. Menstrual secretions entering the male urethra may also cause urethritis.
4. Physiological day in the same room, sperm meet with spilled blood cells at the damaged area of the endometrium, enter the blood, induce the occurrence of anti sperm antibodies, and cause immune infertility and infertility.
5. During menstruation, during sexual arousal, the uterus contracts and fragments of the endometrium squeeze into the pelvis, causing endometriosis and infertility.
Why are menstrual women prone to getting sick?
Normal female genitalia has multiple defense barriers: the first is the vagina. There are lactobacilli here, which can produce lactic acid and maintain an acidic environment in the vagina. Invasive pathogens cannot stand on their feet and cannot reproduce. The second line of defense is in the cervix. There is a mucus plug here, like a bottle stopper, which prevents pathogenic bacteria from entering the uterine cavity. The third line of defense is the endometrium, which has many wrinkles that prevent pathogens from entering the fallopian tubes during menstruation, causing the endometrium to peel off and attached pathogens to be flushed out of the uterus.
The above three lines of defense are temporarily withdrawn during menstruation. After the endometrium falls off, not only does it leave a huge wound, but the mucus plug in the cervix replaces menstrual blood flow, and the acidic environment of the vagina also replaces the neutrality of menstrual blood. This is when women's resistance is weakest. Therefore, women are prone to infection with pathogenic bacteria during menstruation and suffer from various gynecological diseases.