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.
where do the eggs go
If you get a total hysterectomy, the removal of the uterus including the cervix, you can still ovulate because the ovaries and fallopian tubes are still there. The eggs would just be reabsorbed into the body. If an oophorectomy is done, then you will not ovulate because the ovaries have been removed.
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A "total hysterectomy" means that the ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, and cervix have been removed, therefore if you had a "total hysterectomy" you cannot ovulate. There are different types of hysterectomies though, some which do leave the ovaries. If you had a hysterectomy that did not include removing the ovaries you would still ovulate until menopause.
As a hysterectomy is only the removal of the uterus hence you will still ovulate as you still have your ovaries.Ovulation is related to hormones and ovary but egg has no destination . You will not menstruate as there is no womb and therfore the monthly cleansing is not required.
Yes to ovulation, since unless you remove both ovaries (bilateral oopherectomy), they will still produce the ova (eggs) but as there is nowhere for them to attach to, as the womb is removed and therefore will not be washed away. So no menstruation but will still get monthly cycle feeling.
No. No uterus = nowhere for baby to grow
It will depend upon the type of Partial Hysterectomy; sometimes this type of pregnancy is called Ectopic, if your ovaries have been left intact, you can ovulate and the fertilised egg can stay in the Fallopian tubes, this pregnancy is risky and can involve emergency surgeries/deliveries, but again it depends upon what type of Partial Hysterectomy.
I just had a partial hysterectomy with my appendix taken out as well...
absolutely
After a partial hysterectomy the eggs released from the ovaries are absorbed into the blood stream.
nope not at all
Yes i do.
No. You don't regrow a uterus.
I have had a partial hysterectomy and had my tubes tied and now I am pregnant what are the statistics
Total hysterectomy normally refer to complete removal of the uterus and sometimes include the ovaries (oophorectomy). Partial hysterectomy normally leave the cervix behind. The cervix in the part of the uterus visible from the vagina and the opening of the uterus to the outside.
Yes you will if you still have your ovaries.
The removal of an ovary via surgery is called an oopherectomy, an hysterectomy is the surgical removal of the uterus.
Hysterectomy = uterus. Total hysterectomy = uterus and cervix. Salpingo = fallopian tube. oopherectomy = ovary. Therefore just a hysterectomy would be removal of uterus alone and a Total hysterectomy with salpingo oopherectomy (bilateral) is everything.