Yes, you still have your period having having your tubes tied. The uterus still sheds monthly, even though there is no egg being released to flow through the tube into the uterus.
A doctor ties off the tubes that carry the eggs to the uterus. This is to prevent pregnancy.
Yes, you will still get periods if you have a blocked fallopian tube. The fallopian tubes do not determine the timing, existence, or quality of your period. Even without tubes, you would menstruate.
the first cupple periods might be out of wack but yes it will.
yes
I am a mother of 3 and I had my tubes ties about 3 years ago. I have considered having mine reversed. I have found a doctor that will do it. This is where you start, the expected cost is some where between 14,000 and 16,000 to have it done. This is what is holding me back. I do not have that kind of money.
If a woman gets her tubes tied (tubal ligation) she will not be able to get pregnant, but she will still menstruate (have her period). In a tubal ligation the fallopian tubes trhat carry the egg from the ovary to the uterus are cut, but the ovaries themselves aren't removed. Since the ovaries are still producing hormones, the walls of the uterus will continue to cycle through its changes, and a period will occur.
Yes due to the drop in estrogen.
No. Tubal ligations do not affect your periods. though some women find their periods get heavier. Tubes dont really become undone. usually they are cut tied or burnt (or all!) or clamped.
of course, the monthly shedding come from the lining of the uterus ________________________ Removing the fallopian tubes (the passage from the ovaries to the uterus, called a "tubal ligation") will prevent a woman from having children, but she would still have monthly menstrual periods.
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).
HIV does not prevent women from having periods. If a woman was getting periods before getting HIV, periods are likely to continue until menopause.
You can indeed feel a knot in your stomach after getting your tubes tied. This is just irritation and inflammation and should go away.