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A hysterectomy alone means the removal of the uterus. There are two ways that the surgeon can operate 1. Laparoscopically (key hole) where the uterus is removed by 1 to 4 small incisions in the abdomen to allow the surgical instruments to enter the abdominal cavity. 2. Abdominal is where the surgeon accesses the abdominal cavity by way of a six inch incision in your stomach. Recovery time from abdominal surgery is usually longer and you are left with a larger scar than with laparoscopic surgery.
No. In a total hysterectomy both ovaries are removed meaning that the body will not be able to produce any level of estrogen or progesterone
A hysterectomy is the removal of a woman's uterus/womb.
Even when the woman still have the uterus the semen seeps out. The uterus is a dead end and the woman's body does not absorb it. So after a hysterectomy it seeps out like before.
The woman was recovering at home after having had a hysterectomy.
No, a woman cannot still have menstrual periods after a hysterectomy. Menstruation is the shedding of the uterine lining, if there's no more uterus there's no more menstruation.
Hysterectomy is removal of womb only leaving the cervix in place. Pap smears are done to identify cancerous cells in the cervix so if you still have a cervix you are still at risk of cervical cancer. Women who have a total hysterectomy (removal of uterus and cervix) are unlikely to contract this type of cancer.
yes after a women has had a hysterectomy it means that she can no longer have children but can still have a body act like it was not done but the thing is she will be on hormone replacement for life but the structural features dont change at all you look the same
Chlamydia can infect the urethra, which is not removed during a hysterectomy.
recommended testing is urethral
A radical hysterectomy will leave a woman unable to have children, because the procedure removes the fallopian tubes and the ovaries.
hysterectomy