In the US, women have two options for steriliation. Tubal ligation cuts or clips the fallopian tubes so the egg and sperm can't meet. Hysteroscopic sterilization (Essure) inserts a tiny coil into the tubes; as scar tissue grows around it, the tubes are blocked.
Men have the option of vasectomy, in which a tiny portion of each vas deferens is removed so that sperm can't enter the semen.
The three main types of sterilization are physical sterilization (e.g. heat, radiation), chemical sterilization (e.g. ethylene oxide, hydrogen peroxide), and filtration sterilization (e.g. through a membrane filter). Each method has specific advantages and limitations depending on the application.
The three types of microbial control methods are: disinfection, sterilization, and commerical sterilization.
The four main types of soil sterilization methods are chemical sterilization using fumigants or disinfectants, heat sterilization through steam or dry heat, solar sterilization using sunlight to kill pathogens, and soil pasteurization which involves heating soil to a certain temperature to reduce pathogens.
Sterilization can be categorized into two main types: physical sterilization, which includes methods like heat, radiation, and filtration; and chemical sterilization, which involves the use of chemicals such as ethylene oxide or hydrogen peroxide to eliminate microorganisms.
sterilization of equipments, compatibility of blood types,etc
Yes. Chemical sterilization and cold sterilization are the same thing.
No! Rubbing alcohol is not meant for drinking. There are many types of alcohol used for cleaning wounds and sterilization that are poisonous to drink.
Pasteurization does not achieve sterilization. It is a process commonly used to kill pathogens in food and beverages but may not kill all types of microorganisms present.
This is a procedure of sterilization using a gas.
This is the mandatory sterilization of abnormal or undesirable women.
The sterilization process is to have something completely clean
William M. Moss has written: 'Contraceptive sterilization' -- subject(s): Contraception, Sexual Sterilization, Sterilization (Birth control), Tubal sterilization, Vasectomy