No it is not. You no longer have a uterus in which to carry the baby. Before having a hysterectomy you might want to consider freezing some embryos if you would like to have children. These embryos could be implanted in a surrogate mother and you would be able to have children that way.
NO as the uterus which is removed is where the baby grows
Not if uterus removed.
No.
No.As the uterus is removed in a hysterectomy there is nowhere for the baby to be carried to term.
hysterectomy is removal of womb which is where baby grows. No womb = no baby
A hysterectomy involves the removal of her uterus which is where a baby is carried for 9 months.
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.
No after a hysterectomy you cannot grow a baby or give birth
No, you can't get pelvic inflammatory disease if you had a hysterectomy. After hysterectomy, whether or not your cervix is still in place, it isn't possible for germs to ascend from the vagina into the pelvis.
This not possible as hysterectomy is removal of the uterus where the foetus would normally grow.
No, you would need to have a uterus to carry the baby.
As the womb is where the baby grows and you won't have one then NO
None. A hysterectomy is the removal of the uterus and other female reproductive organs.
Extremely unlikely, as the cells which proliferate to form fibroids are already removed during hysterectomy.
Yes, it is possible to have an ectopic pregnancy after a vaginal hysterectomy if one or both ovaries are still present.