Bleeding during ovulation can usually lead to pregnancy when organic diseases and endocrine disorders are ruled out, but if there are endocrine disorders or organic diseases, it will have an effect on pregnancy.
Sex hormone levels in a woman’s body fluctuate and estrogen levels drop during ovulation, which leads to a reduction in the role of maintaining endometrial proliferation, so the local endometrium may shed, resulting in ovulation bleeding. Most ovulatory bleeding is small, occurs occasionally, and has little effect on the body and generally does not affect pregnancy.
However, some women’s body may have luteal insufficiency, endometrial polyps and other diseases, they may lead to irregular menstruation, shortened menstrual cycle, the second menstruation maybe exactly in the middle of menstruation, and mistaken for ovulation bleeding, these diseases can cause progesterone deficiency after ovulation or interfere with the intrauterine environment, so it affects the pregnancy, and it can lead to recurrent miscarriages, infertility and so on.
Therefore, if you have symptoms of ovulation bleeding and plan to get pregnant, you’d better go to the hospital for checkups, such as ultrasound, endocrine and even cervical screening, etc. No abnormality can be normal preparation for pregnancy, and if you find any abnormality, you should seek medical intervention in time.