The Effect of Covid-19 Vaccines on Menstrual cycle in selected Bangladeshi Female Population

Authors

  • Nazifa Tabassum Department of Pharmacy, East West University, Aftabnagar, Dhaka-1212, Bangladesh
  • Mushtahsin Ferdousi Department of Pharmacy, Brac University of Bangladesh, 66 Mohakhali, Dhaka-1212, Bangladesh
  • Sheikh Faisal Asadullah Mahadi Department of Pharmacy, University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1215, Bangladesh
  • Adiba Fairuj Department of Pharmacy, University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1215, Bangladesh
  • Saimon Shahriar Department of Pharmacy, State University of Bangladesh, South Purbachal, Bangladesh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/bpj.v27i2.75183

Keywords:

Women’s health, menstrual health, COVID vaccine, cycle length.

Abstract

The pandemic associated with the coronavirus disease hit Bangladesh in the year of early 2020, which was a part of the global pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2. Six vaccines, namely Moderna, Pfizer, Covishield, Sinopharm, Sinovac and Janssen out of the eight vaccines approved by WHO, were received by the Bangladeshi people. A cross-sectional online survey comprising a descriptive questionnaire was carried out to find the effect of Covid vaccine on menstrual cycle. The longer, shorter or absence of menstrual cycles and any changes in menstrual flow were taken under consideration during the survey. The majority of the respondents  (82.5%)  was  of  20-30  years  old  females.  Among  the  total  309  responders,  210  women  experienced  vaccine associated side effects while fever was experienced by 36.5%, 19.1% experienced fatigue and 21.4% was reported to suffer from headache. Muscle and joint aches as well as pain, swelling and redness were noted to be 38.5% (most common) and 26.4%, respectively  among  others.  Statistically  significant  (p<0.01)  fluctuation  was  observed  in  menstrual  cycle  although  mostly persisting for only one cycle. About 70% of the women noted to have regular menstrual cycle before vaccination, which was decreased to 56% including about 10-14% females experiencing different fluctuation in menstrual flow. Medications taken to alleviate the vaccine-related side effects as well as to regulate normal menstrual cycle were also recorded in the survey. This study attempted to identify the impact of COVID vaccine on menstrual cycle and no significant conclusive negative effect on women's reproductive health was recorded.

Bangladesh Pharmaceutical Journal 27(2): 149-157, 2024 (July)

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Published

2024-07-30

How to Cite

Tabassum, N., Ferdousi, M., Asadullah Mahadi, S. F., Fairuj, A., & Shahriar, S. (2024). The Effect of Covid-19 Vaccines on Menstrual cycle in selected Bangladeshi Female Population. Bangladesh Pharmaceutical Journal, 27(2), 149–157. https://doi.org/10.3329/bpj.v27i2.75183

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Articles