Yes you can but the chances of it are about 10 to 90% It takes alot to get your body secure and healthy for pregnancy again after a tumor is removed: ranges from change in diet, to change in lifestyles, therapies and medication. Have hope but no very high enough to get heart broken. Good luck with it
Yes, if you still have the other ovary. Girls are born with two ovaries, both of which produce eggs. So if you still have the other ovary, you can definitely become pregnant.
Well it depends on the cyst and where and how attached it is i think, I had an ovarian cyst the size of two grapefruits on my right fallopian tube/ovary, and when i had to get emergency surgery to get it removed they said they may have to just remove my right tube and ovary but i would've still been able to have had children, luckily i still have all my parts haha but i hope this relieves some anxiety for you!!
* Yes, you daughter can still get pregnant, but since each ovary takes turns releasing an egg she may have a harder time getting pregnant (although many young women don't.) Please click on this link for more information: http://www.thelaboroflove.com/articles/can-you-still-get-pregnant-if-you-only-have-one-ovary-and-one-fallopian-tube/
If the other ovary is still functional then yes. It may take longer to become pregnant but it is not imposable.
No. During a hysterectomy your uterus is removed and, even if the ovaries do remain, there is no longer a way for sperm and the egg to come into contact with each other.
If both ovaries are removed then you wouldn't be able to get pregnant because there would be no eggs producing. However, if you have only one ovary you can still get pregnant as long as you have a period.
First, it would depend on why you only have one ovary-- most females have two. But sometimes an ovary is removed because of a disease like cancer, although it's more common to remove both ovaries when cancer is diagnosed. But if for some reason you have one ovary, you would still have your period (although some sources say women with only one ovary go through menopause earlier). And you could still become pregnant (if you wanted to). In fact, unless you have other conditions (like cysts), having only one ovary should not be a big problem in your life.
You can get pregnant still yes. As long as the tubes arenβt tied.
It's not likely that the IUD removal affected your fertility.
You can still become pregnant, although it will be more difficult. You still have the right ovary and tube intact. And depending on how much of your tube they had to take out if it wasn't much they could still grow back. That happens sometimes with women that have had their tubes tied.
1 in 6 billion
the ovary does not become fertilized and remains an ovary. if you mean the egg, it becomes a Zygote.