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The removal of an ovary via surgery is called an oopherectomy, an hysterectomy is the surgical removal of the uterus.
Yes you will if you still have your ovaries.
After a partial hysterectomy the eggs released from the ovaries are absorbed into the blood stream.
It is possible. In most modern hysterectomies, the ovaries are left inside the body. This equates to a partial hysterectomy. The ovaries can still release their eggs, and it's possible (albeit rare) that a pregnancy can occur.
Hysterectomy = uterus. Total hysterectomy = uterus and cervix. Salpingo = fallopian tube. oopherectomy = ovary. Therefore just a hysterectomy would be removal of uterus alone and a Total hysterectomy with salpingo oopherectomy (bilateral) is everything.
Hysterectomy is removal of your uterus. Ooectomy is removal of your ovaries. If your ovaries were left when they did the hysterectomy (quite common these days), yes, you can still produce fertile eggs, no problem. If your uterus is gone, though, there's nowhere for the eggs to go. If you still have fallopian tubes, you'd still be at risk for ectopic pregnancy.
If you have no history of birth defects in your family, such as Down Syndrome, and your eggs are free of inflictions, then yes, most likely.
Yes and ovary removal.
No, if your ovaries were removed then you can't put them back in. Find out from your doctor if you had a 'partial hysterectomy' which means you still have one ovary left and can still conceive a child. i stillhave ovaries
It is called the Ovary. The function of the ovary is to produce the ova.
With no ovaries or uterus, you definitely won't get pregnant.
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.