Yes, you can have a tubal pregnancy.
No. A tubal ligation severes the connection between the ovaries and the uterus. The ovaries float above the outside of the uterus and the fallopian tubes are the only opening into the top of the uterus. The cevix is the mouth of the uterus and is at the bottom of the uterus. The cervix is in the vagina and is not open to the area where the ovaries are.
the ovaries cannot be palpated. The uterus can only be palpated when enlarged due to pregnancy or pyometra :) you out.
No, as an oophorectomy removes the ovary you cannot get an ovarian cyst. However, this is only the case if both ovaries are removed.
Your ovaries release an egg every month. Your uterus needs to get rid of the egg released by your ovaries every month and your period is the way it does that. <><><> And only girls have ovaries and a uterus.
No. hysterectomy only removes uterus. The ovaries produce the ova (eggs) so unless you have a bilateral (both) oopherectomy you will still ovulate.
You wont have much of a choice if you want to live. You ovarian tube will burst and a infection will follow. Best is if they get it out before the tube breaks so you have a chanc to keep the ovarie. The embryo can not live there. It can only survive if it gets down to the uterus and get implanted in the uterus wall.
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.
Not entirely unless you have your ovaries removed. Hysterectomy is only the removal of the uterus so the body will still produce ova which will be absorbed and there will be no menses after a hysterectomy.
No, they do not. Only girls and women have it. The uterus is the place inside the woman where the baby will grow for nine months, before it is delivered. Men and boys do not need a uterus, because they do not give birth to a baby.
total abdominal hysterectomy (TAH), and supracervical abdominal hysterectomy (SAH). In a TAH, the uterus and the cervix are both removed. In a SAH, only the uterus is removed. Although your ovaries may be removed during a TAH or SAH, these procedures can easily be performed without removing your ovaries.
A hysterectomy only removes the uterus and cervix. The ovaries remain in place, still prone to cysts.* * The only way to prevent this would be an oophorectomy (surgical removal of the ovaries). Unfortunately, this causes the immediate onset of menopause, and is the reason that it isn't done as a matter of course.
He can't he doesn't have ovaries or a womb the only way is for a women to have a sex change