Yes, a woman can experience hypopigmentation of the skin regardless of whether her ovaries have been removed. Hypopigmentation can be caused by various factors, including genetic conditions, skin injuries, hormonal changes, or certain medical treatments. The removal of ovaries may lead to hormonal changes that can indirectly affect skin pigmentation, but hypopigmentation itself is not directly caused by the removal of ovaries.
Usually women who have had their ovaries removed have to go through hormone replacement therapy or take a hormone pill.
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.
No. There hasn't There has been cases that a woman can be pregnant with her tubes tied Not removed
Providing that the ovaries have not been removed nor you have not gone through the menopause then technically yes although they cannot be fertilised nor become viable without a uterus
In a male dog, he has been neutered i.e. he's been castrated For a female, she has been spayed i.e. ovaries and uterus removed. They can no longer breed.
If you have ovaries removed then this is an oopherectomy. If you have had a hysterectomy then only your uterus would have been taken and cervix left. You would therefore still be at risk of cervical cancer so am glad you are still having pap tests. The abnormal results can be treated with loop diathermy or of course you could have the cervix removed which should have been an option when you had your hysterectomy.
Yes I had both ovaries removed 13 years ago and they discovered two cysts where my ovaries used to be following a workup for abdominal pain they moniter them yearly and they have been stable for 2 years. Go figure ovarian cysts minus the ovaries.
Once the ovaries and uterus have been removed from a female dog, it is impossible for her to get pregnant. If a bitch 'believed' to have been spayed does get pregnant, it must then become obvious that the dog was never spayed.
"Unspayed" refers to a female animal that has not been surgically sterilized through a procedure known as spaying, which involves removing the ovaries and uterus. This prevents the animal from becoming pregnant and eliminates the risk of certain reproductive health issues.
of course, the monthly shedding come from the lining of the uterus ________________________ Removing the fallopian tubes (the passage from the ovaries to the uterus, called a "tubal ligation") will prevent a woman from having children, but she would still have monthly menstrual periods.
If you've been off Depo Provera for 11 months and your ovaries hurt, you are probably about to ovulate.
Ovaries can grow back. If the surgeon left even a tiny little bit, the ovaries can regenerate. A member of my extended family had this happen. This person didn't even have a uterus anymore and hers regrew. The falopian tubes can also regenerate. Blocked falopian tubes can unblock. The human body doesn't always have hard and fast rules. This isn't very common but it does happen.