If it's totally gone, not very likely. The egg may get fertilized, a clump of cells may form, but without the lining for it to nestle in, it won't live much longer.
If you however had it removed by having your uterus scraped due to miscarriage or an abortion, you can be ovulating as soon as a week after and you are highly fertile after a pregnancy. The lining of the uterus us after all removed every month when you get your period.
Menstruation is caused by the break-down of the lining of the womb. This happens when no egg implants. Once an eggs is fertilised it attaches to the womb's lining, so the lining does not break down.
No as your womb(uterus) is removed and you cannot carry the baby
During the years between your first period and before menopause, the lining of the womb (endometrium) thickens monthly in preparation for potential pregnancy and is discharged as "period" if the woman doesn't become pregnant.
Every month, a woman's womb creates a lining of blood and tissue and her body releases an egg. If sexual intercourse occurs and the woman becomes pregnant, the lining of the womb her body has created will cushion and protect the developing baby. However, if she does not become pregnant, the lining will lose its nutrients and die. These dead blood cells must then be passed out of the body along with the egg and this is a period. Once the lining of the womb has broken down and passed out of the body the cycle can begin again.
No. Menstruation is the shedding of the lining of the womb. No womb, no shedding.
Having a period means that the lining of the womb is coming away in readiness for a new egg to be released from the ovaries. When you are pregnant, (when there is a placenta embedded in the lining of the womb) the process of having periods is stopped (or you may lose the baby). Therefore if you are having a true period you should not be pregnant. However, the hormone levels in some women during pregnancy aren't high enough to prevent the lining of the womb being lost in those areas where the placenta isn't attached. So sometimes a woman will have one episode of bleeding or more in the first month or two of pregnancy (and, rarely, throughout the pregnancy).
estrogen
progesterone
no because you get a period when your womb lining isn't being used so I'm sorry to say if you get your period while you're pregnant you have gotten a miscarraige but check with your doctor if I'm wrong then you might be lucky! no because you get a period when your womb lining isn't being used so I'm sorry to say if you get your period while you're pregnant you have gotten a miscarraige but check with your doctor if I'm wrong then you might be lucky!
no in having that operation, u hav had the womb removed basically, where do u think the feotus would develop? is not possible
Yes, but it is not very likely. There are rare cases where the fertilized egg implants in the fallopian tubes. This is called an ectopic pregnancy. The embryo will not very likely survive.
A women without a uterus cannot menstruate, by definition: (of a woman) discharge blood and other material from the lining of the uterus as part of the menstrual cycle.