Does anyone have any experience in both monophasic and triphasic birth control that they would care to share with me? I've been on Ortho tri-cyclen for a year now, and I've generally been very happy with it. But I catch myself manipulating my periods too much, which I know isn't a good idea on the tri-phasic pills, since every pill has different hormones. I have my gyno appointment in a week and I am thinking about asking her if I can switch to monophasic, because then when I try to reschedule my period it won't be as big of a deal (I'm even screwing up my pills so I can make this appointment without a period!) I know myself well enough to know that I'll never stop manipulating my pills when my period is inconvenient. As I understand it, with monophasic you are just taking the same exact pill every day, so it's not a big deal if you just skip the placebos? Is that right?
Does anyone know the difference between the pills, or how they affect your mood/sex drive/weight/emotions differently?
Thanks!
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Fashion is art you live your life in. - Devil Wears Prada | formerly ttara123
I'm on seasonale and I love it. I love only having 4 periods a year and not having to worry about planning things and such because it only happens 4 times a year!!! Also some mail order pharmacies carry it for $60 which is awesome because that's cheaper than me going to walmart trying to fill just one month of other bc pills that I've taken (try $40 a mo for Yasmin ) Anyways. I have been on it for a year and I've been really happy on it. I haven't noticed huge mood swings or weight gain other than the weight I've gained by eating poorly. Sex drive is so-so but it just depends on how tired I am and who I was with as to whether I noticed any increase or decrease.
Edited to mention I was on OTC also and switched to monophasic pills about 3 years ago to manipulate my periods also. I never had a problem switching over.
Not sure if this applies to you, but it's important info that no one told me until recently: if you have any history or predisposition to seratonin-deficit disorders (depression, anxiety, OCD, etc) you should absolutely be on a monophasic pill.
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My body actually doesn't tolerate triphasic pills at all, so I've been on alot of monophasic ones. Be warned that some may not work to supress your period. I tried to supress on Alesse and it totally didn't work (weeks and weeks of continuous spotting instead), but Seasonale worked well for me (just a couple spotting episodes during my second and third packs, totally normal). You'll just have to try a few out.
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I've done both mono and tri-phasic. I had about the same side-effects on both - depression, weight gain, extreme breast tenderness, no sex drive. I am happy to say that the IUD Mirena has not given me any of those side effects. I just have to deal with constant spotting, but that's supposed to go away in a few months.
Not sure if this applies to you, but it's important info that no one told me until recently: if you have any history or predisposition to seratonin-deficit disorders (depression, anxiety, OCD, etc) you should absolutely be on a monophasic pill.
Oh, seriously?? I've been on ortho-tri for several years now. And have struggled w/depression on and off since I was 12!!
I guess it might be time for another dr. appt...thanks for the heads up, halleybird.
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gingembre1 wrote: I've done both mono and tri-phasic. I had about the same side-effects on both - depression, weight gain, extreme breast tenderness, no sex drive. I am happy to say that the IUD Mirena has not given me any of those side effects. I just have to deal with constant spotting, but that's supposed to go away in a few months.
I seriously thought about a DUI, and one doctor recommended it, but a) I've never had a baby before and apparently it's not as good for people who haven't had them, and b) I also use my BCP to control something medical (of course I'll ask my doctor if the monophasics would work just as well to do that)
thanks for your input everybody! It's good to hear from different people about it, all my friends and I take triphasic so I couldn't ask anyone for comparisons
-- Edited by ttara123 at 20:11, 2006-06-28
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Fashion is art you live your life in. - Devil Wears Prada | formerly ttara123
Not sure if this applies to you, but it's important info that no one told me until recently: if you have any history or predisposition to seratonin-deficit disorders (depression, anxiety, OCD, etc) you should absolutely be on a monophasic pill. Oh, seriously?? I've been on ortho-tri for several years now. And have struggled w/depression on and off since I was 12!! I guess it might be time for another dr. appt...thanks for the heads up, halleybird.
the first time I saw a (regular) doctor for my anxiety, one of the first things she asked was whether I was on a triphasic pill. She said the changes in hormones can be really difficult for people struggling with anxiety, depression, etc. (I wasn't on one, but I couldn't believe I didn't know that. When my gyn. found out I was on Zoloft, she immediately said "no ortho-tricyclen then."
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"We live in an age where unnecessary things are our only necessities." --Oscar Wilde