fimbriae
Well there is the fimbriae a the very end.
After an egg is released during ovulation, it is drawn into the fallopian tube. The fimbriae, which are finger-like projections at the end of the fallopian tube, help to capture the egg and guide it into the tube where fertilization can occur if sperm are present. The egg then travels through the fallopian tube toward the uterus.
removal of the outside part (the ovary end) of the fallopian tube
Near the ovary you have fimbriated end of the Fallopian tube. It take in the ovum inside. Then you have cilia in the Fallopian tube to push the ovum towards the uterus.
The fallopian tube is the organ that transports the ovum from the ovary to the uterus for potential fertilization.
The fingerlike projections that capture the freshly ovulated ovum are called fimbriae. They are located at the end of the fallopian tube and help sweep the egg into the tube after ovulation.
Fallopian Tube
The long tube between the ovary and the uterus is the fallopian tube. There are usually two fallopian tubes in the female body, one for each ovary.
Hematosalpinx is the term meaning blood in the fallopian tubes.
If you mean in the uterus nothing happens. But if you mean in the right fallopian tube it's a ectopic pregnancy and it has to be aborted or the fallopian tube will burst which will in the end lead to the woman dying.
The HSG shows that the left fallopian tube is not blocked.
It's called a fallopian tube. It attached from the ovary to the uterus, it's where the eggs travel through.