Honestly, it depends on how it was done. My mother had a tubal pregnancy after she had her tubes tied!
The sperm meets the egg inside the fallopian tube inside the woman's body. Once there is sperm inside the vagina, it must travel up through the cervix, up through the uterus, and into the fallopian tubes. Once in the fallopian tube where the egg has been release from the ovary, the sperm can meet up with the egg for fertilization.
No. I doubt you are pregnant since your tubes were tied. Having them tied means that the ovum doesn't meet the sperm at all. So, it wouldn't be ectopic as well. Your test sounds correct. If you have a problem go see the doctor.
During sexual intercourse, sperm is deposited into the vagina through ejaculation. The sperm travels through the cervix and into the uterus, finally reaching the fallopian tubes where fertilization can occur if an egg is present.
10 grand & up.
There is a lot of mucus build up in those tubes which does not allow for the tubes to be clogged.
Sperm do not go up the wrong ovary. During fertilization, sperm typically swim through the cervix, uterus, and into the fallopian tubes where one of the ovaries releases an egg. The sperm then have the opportunity to fertilize the egg in the fallopian tube, not the ovary itself.
Conception means the meeting of sperm and egg to form an embryo which will form a new individual. Block Fallopian tubes will prevent that. The tubes carry sperm up towards the ovary and it carries the egg down towards the sperm.
When women have their tubes tied, it is done as a method of birth control. It is permanent and involves sealing a woman's fallopian tubes.
The sperm are formed in tubes called seminiferous tubules. They then travel into the epididymus (another tubule network), up through the ductus/vas deferens (another tube) up the front of the pelvis then over the top of the bladder nad back down posterior to it. Here they enter the ejaculatory duct (another tube) which empties into the urethra (another tube). Take you pick.
its not commen but women have been known to get pregnant in there tubes. this is called a tuble pregnancy.if you do get pregnant in your tubes you would have to go to the hospital and they will have to untie the tubes and inplant the baby in the uterus. if you don't get help and get the baby moved into the uterus the baby will continue to stay in the tubes and die while there and you will end up miscarring and have surgery to remove. in some cases the mother dies from excess blood loss from tuble pregnancy if the matter is not taken care of quickly.
Well fisrt the sperm go into the vagina from the penis then travel from there up into the fliopien tubes which there are only two on both sides between the middle where the underbelly is then go up an into the uderis and the sperm then fertilze the eggs and if the woman doesn't have any problems where she can't have a baby or there isn't anything wrong with the guy who gave the sperm,a baby is then in the making.But it may take a couple of days for the sperm to actually start creating a baby.
Sperm travel through the cervix into the uterus by swimming through the cervical mucus. The cervix produces a special type of mucus that is more conducive to sperm movement during ovulation. Additionally, sperm can also be helped by uterine contractions that draw them into the uterus.