Vastectomies can be reversed, but it isn't 100% effective.
The vasectomy should make him completely infertile; no pregnancy will result.
If the vasectomy was done properly, there should not even be a 5% chance of getting pregnant, as this procedure is the most effective way of preventing pregnancy short of a hysterectomy or abstinence. The best thing to do is to have your husband see his physician and have a semenalysis performed, where they can determine whether or not he has any sperm in his ejaculate. Often after a vasectomy, the body recognizes sperm as a foreign substance and "attacks" it with antibodies; this is why vasectomy reversals don't work a good deal of the time. ! Dr. B.
As long as you're menstruating, there's a chance of a natural pregnancy. If you're not menstruating, there's no chance of a natural pregnancy.
you might get pregnant from sleeping with the man that could get you preggo.
It lowers the chance
no, especially if there was no penetration
If the vasectomy was performed properly, it is generally considered to be extremely effective. There is, however, a chance that it didn't "take".
Of course men still enjoy sex after a vasectomy! In fact nothing changes except their semen doesn't contain any sperm anymore (what's about 3%) and the fear of (unwanted) pregnancy is (definitively) gone ...
A diabetic pregnancy is known as "gestational diabetes". There is an increased chance that the pregnant woman will go on to develop full blown after the pregnancy, and there is also the chance that the baby will be large when born. There is also a chance that the baby will go on to develop diabetes in the future.
Yes, there is a chance. This chance is small though. Any amount of sperm/semen that is released from the male's penis that comes in contact with the female's vagina can have a chance of pregnancy. You are probably safe from being pregnant but it is not recommended if you are trying to prevent pregnancy.
Keep having s3x