60-80% of women who try VBAC have a successful vaginal delivery.
Surgical repair would be the main modality of repairing a ruptured uterus. In rare cases, the uterus may need to be removed.
death
The cervix separate the uterus from the vaginal canal.
The success rate for vaginal birth after cesarean section in patients who have had a prior low transverse uterine incision is approximately 70%.
The mothers muscles are pushing him out through the cervix and down the vaginal canal and out through the vaginal opening. Unless there's a c-section where they cut a hole in the mothers belly and take him out that way.
i have a bicornuate uterus and i am pregnant for the second time now with no problems, i had a c-section with my first child at 38 weeks, there was no problems at all with getting pregnant
It depends from how high and how far along you are. You can risk rupturing the uterus and bleed to death.
In the uterus and it comes out of the vaginal canal.
Most ObGyn's will only deliver future pregancies after a c-section by another c-section. The primary reason for this is that a previous c-section greatly increases the chance of rupturing a uterus during natural birth.A ruptured uterus is a life threatening emergency for both mother and baby and generally must be removed (the mother can have no more future childern)Some OB's will allow a mother to try natural birth after a c-section... talk to you doctor.
Rarely, you'd need a large force trauma to occur to the uterus to cause any rupturing. That or a pre-exsisting medical condition.
I believe the answer is prolapse of the uterus.
Menstrual flow is the uterus lining shedding, so it originates in the uterus and would leave the uterus via the cervix. The cervix is at the top of the vaginal canal, the vaginal canal then is the passageway through which the menstrual flow passes.