Yes you will if you still have your ovaries.
Pregnancy After HysterectomyHysterectomy means removal of the uterus.A partial hysterectomy would be removal of part of the uterus, or removal of the uterus with the cervix left intact.In common usage many people refer to "partial hysterectomy" when they mean that the uterus is removed but the tubes and ovaries are left intact.As long as the tubes and ovaries remain it is possible to develop a tubal pregnancy after hysterectomy, though it is very rare. It can happen when sperm pass through the cervix or through a gap in the surgical closure and join an egg. The egg can then implant in the tube or within the abdomen.Such a pregnancy cannot survive. It is a very dangerous situation for the woman. If discovered late it can lead to life threatening internal bleeding.
Hysterectomy does not affect the time a spermatozoa will live apart from the fact they have no place to swim to as no womb to penetrate and cannot fertilise the eggs Some die immediately some will last longer.
If you are asking whether you can still produce an egg, yes, as long as your remaining ovary is not disfunctional. But any viable ova would have to be removed for in vitro fertilization, which is extremely expensive, extremely painful for the surrogate, plus, in vitro fertilization and implantation has been linked to autism in children. It is wiser to adopt a child instead.
Menstrual bleeding occurs when thickened endometrial tissue (which lines the uterus) breaks up and reverts to being thin, so it's natural to assume that a hysterectomy will completely end periods. However, as long as there's a functioning ovary there will be a monthly cycle, and if there is any remaining endometrial tissue it will respond normally to hormones. Some hysterectomies are partial and so a portion of the uterus remains. Even when the uterus is fully removed, some endometrial tissue may remain attached to the uterus's side of the cervix, which can cause mini-periods.
A hysterectomy does not affect your lifespan and this depends on how old you are now and when you are called for by higher authority.
As long as you have at least one functioning ovary left you can get pregnant.
The long tube between the ovary and the uterus is the fallopian tube. There are usually two fallopian tubes in the female body, one for each ovary.
The long tube in the middle of a flower that houses the ovary at its base is called the pistil. It is a female reproductive organ that typically consists of the stigma, style, and ovary. The ovary contains the ovules, which will develop into seeds after fertilization.
You will still produce eggs after a hysterectomy until your body goes through menopause. The eggs are still viable the regardless of the hysterectomy.
It can take up to 2 hours to do a hysterectomy procedure but some can be done in as little as one hour.
Spotting will continue for 2 to 8 weeks.
The long extension of the ovary in a flower is called the "style." The style connects the ovary, which contains the ovules, to the stigma, where pollen is received. It plays a crucial role in the fertilization process by allowing pollen tubes to grow from the stigma down through the style to reach the ovary.