If you have had a total hysterectomy, the answer is No.....you no longer have a womb in which to carry a developing fetus. The only exception to this would be an ectopic pregnancy, which occurs when a fertilized egg lodges itself in the fallopian tubes & begins to develop there, but this is usually non-viable.
A hysterectomy involves the removal of her uterus which is where a baby is carried for 9 months.
No as your womb(uterus) is removed and you cannot carry the baby
No, you would need to have a uterus to carry the baby.
A radical hysterectomy will leave a woman unable to have children, because the procedure removes the fallopian tubes and the ovaries.
9 months to term.
No, a woman cannot carry a baby to term if her uterus is gone, as the uterus is essential for housing and supporting the development of the fetus during pregnancy. Without a uterus, there is no structure to facilitate implantation of the embryo or sustain a pregnancy. In cases where a woman has had a hysterectomy, assisted reproductive technologies, like gestational surrogacy, may be an option for having a child.
Oxygen
It nourishes the fetal pig.
no, men do not have the eternal parts to carry a baby fetus.
Only the female who carry the fetus decide, no matter how old she is.
Yes, there are exceptions to the typical rule that arteries carry oxygenated blood. The pulmonary arteries are one such exception; they transport deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs for oxygenation. Similarly, the umbilical arteries in a fetus carry deoxygenated blood from the fetus to the placenta.
The umbilical cord contains the blood vessels that carry oxygenated and nutrient-rich food from the placenta to the fetus, and blood vessels that carry deoxygenated blood and nutrient-rich blood from the fetus to the placenta.