no
No, you can't still ovulate after menopause. Menopause is the process by which a woman's body comes to the end of it's reproductive years and the woman stops producing eggs. Although menopause can take years, once through menopause there is no more ovulation.
If you've not been through menopause, yes.
its unlikely
Yes, but the only problem is that your cycle will not be regular as it has been so you don't know when you will ovulate. This is one reason that many babies result when menopause begins. You may go two months with no period and then have one for a week in month three. Finally, after 3-6 months of no periods you will be in menopause. It is very disconcerning, so still use protection if you are sexually active.
If you still have your ovaries, you should go through menopause at the normal time for you. With a full hysterectomy, you will experience "surgical menopause."
YES you can still ovulate without a menstrual cycle. Also you can still get pregnant without a period.
An irregular cycle can be a signal of no ovulation, but genarally speaking, you ovulate every time you have a period.
menopause signifies and end to a woman's fertility, however it can take a number of years to go through the premenopause and pregnancy is still possible. Menopause is only complete once there has been no period for twelve months at least.
no you still have not began to ovulate
Tubal Ligation is when the fallopian tubes are tied, cut, or blocked somehow to stop them from getting pregnant. This does not stop the menstrual cycle as women still ovulate and the uterus lining still plumps and sheds as it would normally.
No, once you become pregnant your body no longer releases an egg because the one before has been fertilized. It you could still ovulate it would cause you to have a period.
Your body produces a variety of hormones throughout the month. The first hormone tells your ovaries to ovulate. Once the egg is released, it is released along with another hormone that tells your body to get ready for a fertilised egg. If no fertilised egg arrives, the uterine lining breaks down and you get a period. As your body starts menopause, two things happen: firstly you stop producing the hormone to tell you to ovulate and secondly your body runs out of eggs to ovulate. If your body doesn't think you've ovulated, you don't get a period. If your body is not producing the hormone naturally, then by giving it synthetic hormones (i.e. the pill) you are artificially tricking your body to think it's ovulated and you will get your period. That is how the Pill works - it prevents ovulation but still still gives the body the hormones it needs to go through the mentrual cycle. Many women use the Pill instead of other types of HRT (hormone replacement therapy) during the first years of peri-menopause so they can regulate their cycles and hormones while still preventing pregnancy (though their chances may be greatly reduced of getting pregnant). You will get your period if your body has the right hormones (natural or synthetic) at the right time, whether you have actually ovulated or not. However, you cannot get pregnant without ovulation.