Yes. It's called tubal libation reversal surgery.
Yes, you still ovulate, but with your tubes tied the eggs cannot travel into the uterus in order to become fertilized.
getting your fallopian tubes tied is a medical procedure in which they tie off a womens fallopian tubes (where the egg gets released through into the womb) so she can not concieve (get pregnant).
None. Women have their fallopian tubes tied when they no longer want to get pregnant.
Tubes clipped - Fallopian tubes are clipped and it is reversible. Tubes cauterized (burned) - Tubes are burned (not reversible). Tubes tied - Doctors don't do this procedure that often, but it is what it is, your fallopian tubes are tied. (reversible but with difficulty and lower success rate)
Due to the risk of infection, the Fallopian tubes are ligated . . . tied off with an appropriate fine cord. It is not impossible for this to be reversed, but there is a lot of expensive surgery involved that may or may not work.
Bilateral sterilization means both tubes (fallopian tubes or vasa deferens) were cut/tied/etc.
Tubal ligation cannot be reversed by diet, only by surgery.
Vasectomy is the family planning operation done on men. men vasdifferentia is cut and tied so that the sperm will not come out ..Tubectomy is family planning operation done on women. womens fallopian tubes are tied so that mens sperm will not enter her fallopian tubes
A woman's period is tied to the growth of lining in the womb, which is controlled by hormones produced by the ovaries. Even though the egg cannot reach the womb after the tubes are tied, the hormones controlling the cycle are still produced, so the cycle should still be regular.
Tubal ligation cannot be reversed by diet, only by surgery.
No. A salpingo-oopherectomy is the removal of one (unilateral) or both (bilateral) ovaries and fallopian tubes.
When women have their tubes tied, it is done as a method of birth control. It is permanent and involves sealing a woman's fallopian tubes.
the fallopian tubes connect the ovaries to the uterus