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The fallopian tubes are blocked bilaterally.
No.
no idea man
oil
If you mean, "How long ago did it occur," then the actual explosion that triggered the spill occurred on April 20th, 2010. If you are referring to the duration of the spill, then it is technically still an issue.
Peritoneal spill is the best possible outcome for a hysterosalpingogram. It means that when the dye was injected into the uterus, it passed through one or both fallopian tubes and spilled into the pelvic cavity, demonstrating that the tubes are patent (open). Bilateral peritoneal spill means both tubes were open.
The fallopian tubes are blocked bilaterally.
Peritoneal spill is a good thing; it means the fallopian tubes are patent (open). You'd only want to get it treated if you wanted your fallopian tubes blocked (for sterilization purposes).
It's usually good news (unless you were checking on your sterilization procedure). Free peritoneal spill means the fallopian tubes appear to be open on the hysterosalpingogram.
It means the fallopian tube on that side was blocked.
in HSG a dye is injected transcervically to check the patency of the tube of femalel genital organs. so when the dye is injected it spills out to the peritoneal cavity which proves patency of the tubes and is known as peritoneal spillage.
in HSG a dye is injected transcervically to check the patency of the tube of femalel genital organs. so when the dye is injected it spills out to the peritoneal cavity which proves patency of the tubes and is known as peritoneal spillage.
The HSG shows that the left fallopian tube is not blocked.
Spill
It sounds like your fallopian tubes are open on the HSG
Spill
Opening up classified information is a "leak" of information.