Me. I do. I had one at age 21 (obviously for serious health problems) and it was a godsend. I feel great! Also, I can walk through the tampon isle and laugh, and go to bed at night without having to remember to take a little green pill first, I never worry about pregnancy and when I go to the doctor and the nurse askes when my last period was before looking at my chart I can have a little fun telling her, with a straight face, December of 2002. I can never bear children but, I wouldn't have been able to anyway and my hysterectomy freed me to live my life to the fullest. Forget any baloney about being less feminine, or less of a woman or un-marriable. Those people are all jealous. Okay, not jealous but misguided. You are the same person. Does a man lose his masculinity from a vasectomy? No, and you don't lose yours from a hysterectomy. Don't forget to push your cart through the tampon isle the next time you are in the store and laugh. :)
no I feel less
Not unless there is a complication before he has given you the "all and release." If you mean total hysterectomy (uterus and cervix) then you will still have your fallopian tubes and ovaries, so if you have trouble with these then yes.
Can I still get a yeast infection after a hysterectomy?
Yes you are still a virgin if you had a hysterectomy.
Yes, you can get a hysterectomy while Depo Provera is still in effect.
You will still produce eggs after a hysterectomy until your body goes through menopause. The eggs are still viable the regardless of the hysterectomy.
Yes but let your surgeoon know before the operation. You won't need it afterwards.
NO
A hysterectomy removal of utereus or total hysterectomy uterus and cervix will not affect your hormone levels as you still have your ovaries which produce the hormones.
Hysterectomy does not guarantee a relief from symptoms or from endometriosis. Surgery is surgeon dependent. If all the endometriosis is not removed as the same time as the removal of your uterus and your ovaries, the patient may still have endometriosis after this procedure.
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 you just had your uterus and cervix removed your ovaries will still be functioning and you will still go through the menopause. The average age being 51.7 years. If you had your ovaries removed at the time of the hysterectomy then you would have gone into immediate surgical menopause at that time.
You can always get it but it's not typical after a hysterectomy if that is what you mean. It's a vaginal infection and you still have a vagina.