Want this question answered?
No. There hasn't There has been cases that a woman can be pregnant with her tubes tied Not removed
A woman still gets a period after having her tubes removed or tied because she still has her ovaries which is what cause her to have a menstrual cycle. She still has her womb as well, and that is where the blood builds up, waiting for the body to signal that a pregnancy has not occured. If the womb has been removed and the ovaries left in place, the woman will not bleed but will still feel normal cyclical monthly changes.
Nulligravida
nulligravida
See a doctor.
No, there will not. Although a man will no longer be able to impregnate a woman (allowing his sperm to reach a woman's fertilized egg) with his testicles removed, there is an easier and much faster procedure to stop a man from impregnating a woman in which the Vas Deferens (tubes leading from the testicles to the penis) can be cut and tied together known as a vasectomy.
Intubation is the insertion of a tube into a patient, such as breathing tubes. When the tubes are removed, it is referred to as extubation, or to extubate.
So you can have yucky Taco Bell.
It is not typically done at the same time as delivery, especially with a vaginal delivery though it can be done during a scheduled cesarean, but it is possible to have it done very soon afterwards.
Both fallopian tubes and ovaries are removed
Abstinence. A woman who has had a hysterectomy (uterus removed) or oophorectomy (ovaries removed), stands zero chance of conceiving. Even a tubal ligation (for a woman ) or a vasectomy (for a man) has a small failure rate from either a poorly done procedure or self reversal by the cut, tied and burned tubes reconnecting.
B/c when fixing a pet body parts are removed, but when a woman has her tubes tied it's just like plugging a tube. All parts remain, they're just not connected any more.