I think it has been known, but it must be very rare.
The vasectomy should make him completely infertile; no pregnancy will result.
Vastectomies can be reversed, but it isn't 100% effective.
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 ...
You can´t avoid pregnancy by using a certain position. The only way to avoid pregnancy is by using a form of contraceptive such as the pill, the condom, or the fertility awareness method.
Nearly 0%, due to the vasectomy more than the fact that you are breastfeeding, etc; but nothing is fool proof except abstinence.
No it wont. the only thing a vasectomy does is stop sperm from mixing in with the semen. Only a very small proportion of your ejaculate is sperm/ so everything looks the same and feels the same. You still get the same bang only you will be firing blanks.
A Vasectomy procedure will cost about $1,300 to any man not wanting to have children any longer if the procedure is done by the Houston Vasectomy Clinic.
JUST DONT HAVE IT!! duhhh Get on birth control, use a condom, don't have sex, have a vasectomy or get your tubes tied. Ask your doctor for the method that is best for you.
Oh yes, highly likely. Men need to be rechecked by urologist and have a zero sperm count before having unprotected sex.
You should not be able to get pregnant by a man who has had a vasectomy.
To be technically correct, it's called an "Ectopic" pregnancy, which occurs when a fertilized egg begins to grow in one of the fallopian tubes that normally transport an unfertilized egg from the ovary to the uterus rather than descending into the uterus and attaching to the Uterus wall/lining. As for your question, a man who has had a vasectomy is by definition sterile and cannot impregnate a woman (assuming that the vasectomy was successful, of course). Vasectomy involves cutting and cauterizing or clamping the tubes that transport sperm from the testicles, so after this procedure has been performed, no sperm will be present in the ejaculate that comes from the man during orgasm. Normally, only a few small drops of the ejaculate come from the testicles anyway, the rest is from the prostate so there is no noticeable difference in ejaculate from vasectomized men. For several weeks following a vasectomy, birth control measures should still be used to prevent and remaining sperm from potentially causing pregnancy, but that sperm wouldn't cause an ectopic pregnancy any more than other sperm.
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.