Can the anti-Convid 19 vaccine affect the menstrual cycle?

Vaccines are designed to activate the immune system, and some experts are asking if this could temporarily affect the menstrual cycle. Scientists have begun research, but it is still unknown if anti - coronary vaccines can affect the menstrual cycle in women. So far, it has been difficult to establish a link between [...]
Vaccines are designed to activate the immune system, and some experts are asking if this could temporarily affect the menstrual cycle.
Scientists have begun research, but it is still unknown if anti - coronary vaccines can affect the menstrual cycle in women.
So far, it has been difficult to establish a link between secondary changes and vaccines. The reported changes may also have been the result of the impact of several other factors, such as stress, diet, or lifestyle.
There was also a lack of spending to monitor the change in the cycle after taking the vaccine to a global level.
If scientists finally determined that there is a link between vaccines and short-term changes in the cycle, that, they believe, would not be enough reason to avoid vaccines.
The profits of vaccines are certainly bigger than a difficult cycle, even if they are linked”, said Mary Jane Minkin, a gynecologist and professor at Yale University Medical School.
Recently a study has been started to collect information on this.
Although the findings will not determine whether there is a link between the coronary vaccine and changes in the menstrual cycle, they can help lay the groundwork for further research, says researcher from St. Louis University, Katharine Lee.
Gynecologist Jen Gunter from San Francisco says it is possible that there is a connection because the mucose of the uterus contains immune cells that help protect it. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there is no evidence that any vaccine, including the one against coronary, affects fertility.












