Full hysterectomy means removal of uterus and cervix too. But you have not mentioned the ovarian. If those are not removed check for ovarian cysts that most probably have been ruptured and blood passed through abdominal cavity slowly to vagina.
No because a hysterectomy is the process of removing the uterus. The baby would have nowhere to live or grow inside of you. Since the cervix is sealed off when the uterus is removed, there is no passage for sperm and eggs to meet. Pregnancy requires the womb, ovaries and fallopian tubes to be present. The ovaries produce the eggs. If these have been removed during a total hysterectomy, pregnancy would be impossible.If you had a TOTAL hysterectomy, where they removed your ovaries, you will not be producing eggs, so there is nothing for the sperm to fertilize, thus you cannot get pregnant. However, if you had a partial hysterectomy (they just removed your uterus and left at least one ovary), you can still produce eggs. If the cervix tears open, then the eggs could be fertilized, and may attach to either a fallopian tube, or even the wall of the abdomen. However, this is not a viable pregnancy that could be carried to term, and most women would not even realize this occurred, since in most cases, it would dislodge and remove itself from the body. However, in some rare cases, medical intervention may be needed to remove the tubal pregnancy if it does not do so on its own and grows too large, as this is a threat to the mothers life. There is no way a baby can be carried to term after the uterus is removed.No.
progesterone since it is what prepares and sustains the uterus for the fetus
RFA can be used to treat tumors that are too small or too inaccessible for removal by conventional open surgery.
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A disadvantage to laparoscopy is that some growths may be too large or extensive to remove with laparoscopic instruments, necessitating a laparotomy.
youre born with it you can poop in your mothers uterus too
Post-hysterectomy bleeding can occur months or years after the procedure and may be due to a number of factors, some of which are potentially serious and will require an evaluation and possible treatment by your physician. Fallopian tube prolapse, endometriosis, granulation tissue,atrophic vaginitis, can cause bleeding after hysterectomy. Fallopian tube prolapse (FTP) is a rare complication following both abdominal and vaginal hysterectomies. A biopsy can determine whether the condition is present. One of the reasons a woman might elect to undergo a hysterectomy is endometriosis. This condition occurs when the tissue that lines the uterus develops in other areas of the body. Endometeriosis can be painful and cause irregular bleeding.When the cervix is removed, what's referred to as a vaginal cuff is created.This is where endometriosis can develop following a hysterectomy. Granulation tissue is a healing tissue that grows to help ward off infection following a hysterectomy. Occasionally granulation tissue grows too profusely. Atrophic vaginitis is an inflammation of the vagina caused by low estrogen levels and severe irritation.
I have a Wolffian duct cyst and that's one of my more minor anomalies. I was born with a double uterus (uterus didelphys, one of the Mullerian anomalies), including two cervices and a septate vagina. In addition, I have three (or sort of two and a half) kidneys, with three separate ureters.In my understanding, these types of anomalies are often related and co-occurring. I have others, too -- a long list of this and that.I don't have two uteruses now, or even one, as I had uterine cancer, and hysterectomy is a given for that.
No not TOO big but that's big!
Uterine prolapse is when the uterus slips out of place and in to the canal. This can be caused by the uterine muscles being too weak to support the uterus any longer.
Your Feet's Too Big was created in 1936.