Tampons can't get stuck inside you. Tampons can go no further than your vaginal canal, this is because at the top of the vaginal canal is the cervix (opening to the uterus) and a tampon cannot pass through this. As long as you relax and you're using tampons correctly you can remove a tampon - if you struggle then you'd need to see your doctor for help to remove the tampon.
A tampon cannot really get stuck at all. A tampon can go no further than your vaginal canal, it can't be pushed any higher than that. As long as you are using a tampon and relaxed upon removal the tampon will come out.
Tampons do not cause pregnancy, the fact that a tampon was pushed up inside you have absolutely no relation to pregnancy what-so-ever. If you had sex and ejaculate got into your vagina there is a chance of pregnancy, but as long as you used emergency contraception chances are slim.
It really doesn't feel like anything if you insert it correctly. There are directions on the side of the box, and it hurts if it isn't pushed all the way inside. Hope I helped!
Yes, I guess so. If he feels comfortable with pulling the tampon out of your vagina.
Yes, a man would know if you have a tampon in when he inserts his fingers into your vagina. He would be able to feel the tampon inside the vagina.
No, of course not - a tampon would be inside the vagina, urine comes out via your urethra.
If the emergency room doctor did an effective speculum exam, then the doctor w2ould not be able to miss a tampon in your vagina. There is nowhere else a tampon can go; the vagina is a dead end. But removal of a lost tampon is not a reason for an emergency room visit. Next time, see your regular health care provider or your local family planning agency. They are better able to provide this kind of care. Routine GYN care is not what emergency rooms are for, and not their specialty.
If you have a tampon in your vagina, your health care provider would have noticed it during your pap smear.
what is wrong with you??
Nothing happens to a tampon in a person after they are deceased, the tampon stays within the vagina and decomposes or is burned via cremation just like the rest of the body. In some rare cases the tampon may be pushed out of the body as it decomposes, similar to 'coffin birth' but this is rare.
I believe you are asking how to find information on how to insert a tampon - all tampon boxes include instructions, normally both on the side of the box and on the leaflet inside the box, or you can search online for instructions or videos showing how to use tampons.
I had a tampon in and forgot to remove it when I went to bed. I have a heavy flow during the beginning of menstruation and when I went to the bathroom I thought I felt it fall out on its own, but when I looked in the toilet it was too red to see the tampon. I have checked twice and I cannot feel it inside me, is it safe to use another tampon?