Pink Blood
Your blood may appear pink in color at the beginning or end of your period, especially if you're spotting. This lighter shade usually means that the blood has mixed with your cervical fluid. Sometimes pink menstrual blood may indicate low estrogen levels in the body.
Pinkish-brown discharge or spotting is common around the time of a person's period, but it can also happen at other times because of ovulation, pregnancy, or health problems. However, this color of discharge is rarely a cause for concern.
Pink blood is likely due to your cervical fluid mixing with your period blood and lightening the colour – you may notice this on days when your flow is light, like at the end of your period.
Pink discharge in early pregnancy may occur due to implantation bleeding, which is a small amount of light spotting or bleeding that occurs about six to 12 days after conception. This type of bleeding is not at all uncommon and is thought to happen when the fertilized egg attaches to the lining of the uterus.
Does pink discharge mean pregnancy? Not necessarily, but it can. Implantation bleeding – the spotting or light bleeding that sometimes occurs following conception – can be an early sign of pregnancy.
If you are a woman of childbearing age, the presence of a pink discharge when you wipe (a reddish, pink or brown appearance with no smell), in the first few days before your period starts or after it ends, is normal and should not cause alarm.
Pink discharge that occurs before or right after a period may be a normal part of menstruation. It can also be normal if it occurs around the time of ovulation, if you change birth control, or if you are in perimenopause. However, if you notice other symptoms or suddenly have an increase in discharge, see your doctor.
Pink discharge is often just a sign that you are beginning your period, so you may find that it appears in the few days before you begin your cycle, as spots of blood become mixed up with the mucus of the discharge, and make it a light pink tone.
In some cases, a light period can be due to stress or weight loss. It can also indicate pregnancy or a hormone-related condition. Similarly, a person may have spotting or colored discharge that they mistake for a period.
Implantation bleeding is brown, dark brown or slightly pink. It's considered spotting or light bleeding. It shouldn't be heavy enough to soak through a pad. Implantation bleeding resembles the flow of vaginal discharge more than it resembles the flow of your period.
Color: Menstrual bleeding is typically a bright to dark red, and will look like what you typically experience during your monthly period. Implantation bleeding is a much lighter hue, typically a very light pink or light rust color.
Differentials of bright pink venous blood include cyanide and carbon monoxide poisoning, hypothermia, dyshaemoglobinaemias and lipaemia. Other aetiologies of abnormally coloured blood include methaemoglobinaemia (may appear brownish) and sulfhaemoglobinaemia (may appear darker red with a bluish hue).
Spotting is light vaginal bleeding that can happen when you're pregnant. It is a very common and tends to happen in early pregnancy, during the first trimester. Spotting is usually red or pink in colour. It can also look brown, like old blood or like the bleeding at the start and end of your period.
Pregnancy. Brown blood or spotting can sometimes also be an early sign of pregnancy that doctors refer to as implantation bleeding.
Generally bleeding during pregnancy is uncommon, so what you had was probably just a light, short period. But if you've had unprotected sex since your last period, and the bleeding was very light and different than your normal period, taking a pregnancy test is definitely a good idea.
If you notice it only when wiping or can easily absorb any light bleeding with a pantyliner (or even just underwear), it's spotting. If you need a pad or tampon to absorb bleeding between periods, it generally wouldn't be considered spotting.
The amount of bleeding with implantation can be different from person to person. Some people may not experience any bleeding, while others may have bleeding that looks like a light period and lasts a couple of days (two to three). “Anything in this range is considered normal,” Dr.
Dehydration can cause other complications to both mother and child. Although not common, dehydration can cause spotting in pregnancy. It's believed some women experience spotting when dehydrated, as their hCG levels temporarily stop increasing, or dip.
Often, taking a pregnancy test before the missed period or during implantation bleeding is just too soon for tests to offer conclusive results. Ideally, waiting a week after the spotting or missed period is most desirable as the results should prove more accurate.