Pain has always been a nightmare for women, the most famous of which are menstrual pain and childbirth pain, while ovulation pain, which occasionally quietly joins in, is a very overbearing behavior for women.
For married women, ovulation is a very exciting thing, but sometimes it is also annoying and puzzling accompanied by abdominal pain. Ovulation is a happy thing, but why do you have to suffer? It's weird.
In fact, this kind of periodic abdominal pain was noticed by gynecologists as early as 1872, but it is often confused with chronic appendicitis because of abdominal pain. But today, patients with this kind of pain are often mistaken for ovarian rupture and undergo emergency surgery.
The follicular structure of female ovary is very similar to that of egg. Eggs are like yolk, follicular fluid is like egg white, and follicular envelope is like eggshell.
The growth process of eggs and follicles is very simple. On the first day of menstruation, new eggs and follicles begin to brew and grow. As time goes on, follicles and eggs will get bigger and bigger. On 14 day, the maximum pressure of follicular fluid is the greatest, and it is also the time when the egg matures.
However, because the follicle is very hard, it is necessary to use lutein secreted by the pituitary gland to soften a part of the follicle, and then use the pressure of the already tight follicular fluid to break through, and then force the egg out. This explosive egg-breaking, spouting follicular fluid, is enough to cause peritoneal pain, which is called ovulation pain.
If the blasting force is insufficient, women will not feel this shock. According to research statistics, only 50% of women will have pain during ovulation, not every month. Most of them are accidental events of flower arrangement.
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Pain during ovulation has many characteristics, such as the center of the lower abdomen, the pubic bone and both sides. But the side of the abdomen is the most. It is generally believed that ovulation is on that side and pain is on that side, but not necessarily. According to research, it only occurs on the same side, but why the pain occurs on the other side is still unclear.
It has been explained that although the follicles on the anovulatory side are small, they can also be strengthened by lutein in the pituitary gland at the same time, and at this time, the uterus, fallopian tubes and large intestine will also spasm at the same time. It is precisely because of this feature that we can provide another reference method for women to easily grasp the good opportunity of ovulation.
About 60 years ago, before ultrasound, doctors used the indigenous method of basal body temperature and menstrual cycle to study. The results show that this kind of periodic abdominal pain mostly occurs on the 7th day after menstruation, that is, the 3rd day before the next menstruation. No matter how irregular menstruation is, the pain always occurs on the 3rd day before the next menstruation (the 65438+ before menstruation).
The study of basal body temperature also found that most of the pain occurred on the day when the body temperature rose (generally considered as ovulation), and only a small part occurred on the day before or after, so it was called ovulation pain for the first time. At the same time, we also noticed that the pain on the right side was more than that on the left side, which broke our cognition that the frequency of occurrence on the left and right sides should be similar.
The reason is unknown, but later research found that 80% of ovulation is still left and right, and the remaining 20% is random. Moreover, it was further found that after taking ovulation-promoting drugs, the ovulation rate on both sides increased to about 30.8%, and it was higher when using ovulation-promoting needles, reaching as high as 70%. The reason is still unknown.
However, this tells us that although the two ovaries in female abdomen are born from the same root, they have their own characteristics, so they often have different performances. Another finding is that there will never be two pains in the same month, and one pain can last for 6- 12 hours, but it will not exceed 24 hours.
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However, recent studies have also found that about 70% of ovulation pain actually occurs at the moment when the luteinizing hormone in the pituitary suddenly rises, not at the moment of follicular rupture. Moreover, women with pain during ovulation must ovulate after about 90% or more hours, which gives young women an indicator.
Ovulation pain means that your ovarian ovulation function is good, and you have confidence in yourself without thinking. If you want to get pregnant, you should grasp the prime time of ovulation after 24 hours.
It is actually very simple to diagnose whether ovulation hurts. As long as you are faithful to your menstrual period, if it is 28 days, the ovulation date will fall on 14 days. If it is delayed for 7 days, it will be 14 plus 7, and the ovulation date will be 2 1 day. Generally, it is mild abdominal pain, 1-2 days later. If it is serious, you should see a doctor.