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Hysterectomy is removal of your uterus. Ooectomy is removal of your ovaries. If your ovaries were left when they did the hysterectomy (quite common these days), yes, you can still produce fertile eggs, no problem. If your uterus is gone, though, there's nowhere for the eggs to go. If you still have fallopian tubes, you'd still be at risk for ectopic pregnancy.
It is possible. In most modern hysterectomies, the ovaries are left inside the body. This equates to a partial hysterectomy. The ovaries can still release their eggs, and it's possible (albeit rare) that a pregnancy can occur.
They may not put you on any hormones. The remaining ovary will be enough to make the hormones you need. The doctors will need to do blood tests one in awhile.
If you are asking whether you can still produce an egg, yes, as long as your remaining ovary is not disfunctional. But any viable ova would have to be removed for in vitro fertilization, which is extremely expensive, extremely painful for the surrogate, plus, in vitro fertilization and implantation has been linked to autism in children. It is wiser to adopt a child instead.
No because a hysterectomy is the process of removing the uterus. The baby would have nowhere to live or grow inside of you. Since the cervix is sealed off when the uterus is removed, there is no passage for sperm and eggs to meet. Pregnancy requires the womb, ovaries and fallopian tubes to be present. The ovaries produce the eggs. If these have been removed during a total hysterectomy, pregnancy would be impossible.If you had a TOTAL hysterectomy, where they removed your ovaries, you will not be producing eggs, so there is nothing for the sperm to fertilize, thus you cannot get pregnant. However, if you had a partial hysterectomy (they just removed your uterus and left at least one ovary), you can still produce eggs. If the cervix tears open, then the eggs could be fertilized, and may attach to either a fallopian tube, or even the wall of the abdomen. However, this is not a viable pregnancy that could be carried to term, and most women would not even realize this occurred, since in most cases, it would dislodge and remove itself from the body. However, in some rare cases, medical intervention may be needed to remove the tubal pregnancy if it does not do so on its own and grows too large, as this is a threat to the mothers life. There is no way a baby can be carried to term after the uterus is removed.No.
The ovary of which there are two above the uterus.One to the right and the other to the left. Each is connected to the uterus by a duct which delivers the eggs to the ovaries after ovulation which generally occurs once a month.
No, if your ovaries were removed then you can't put them back in. Find out from your doctor if you had a 'partial hysterectomy' which means you still have one ovary left and can still conceive a child. i stillhave ovaries
It could be possible that your brain sensed a drop in hormones since the removal of the ovary, and your other ovary is now working overtime to restabilize your hormones, resulting in an excess of hormones in the body, causing your breast to grow larger.
left overy
the egg would be released on the 2nd of April because you release eggs once every month
58825 is the CPT code for transposition of the left ovary.
Right ovary is not visualized Left ovary measurement 10.6x3.4x4.1 with fine? Internal echoes No Adnexal mass or collection is seen. Complication :- Left ovary chocolate cyst