Well,
The fallopian tubes are among the smallest organs in the female body. Charged with the task of capturing a one-celled egg and then providing the environment for its union with a single sperm, the fallopian tube is truly the place where life begins.
The structure and function of each fallopian tube is complex, almost
beyond belief. As small as a strand of spaghetti, the inside of the tube
is extremely delicate. The walls of the tube are lined with thousands
of delicate hair-like structures called cilia. In fact, more than one person has noted that the internal walls of the fallopian tube appear to resemble a lush and supple coral bed, when viewed under an electron microscope.
Due to the tiny size of the inside of the tube and the delicate garden-like structure within, the fallopian tube is poorly prepared for the invasion of collagen cross-links that form as a response to inflammation or infection. As the body heals, and collagen lies down within the tube, it covers and adheres the cilia and the garden of support structures within the tube, blanketing them in a glue that constricts their movement and function. Continual adhesion formation can finally bind one side of the tube to the other, resulting in total tubal occlusion (blockage). You may want to download this complimentary eBook that goes more in-depth about what blocked tubes are exactly and the different treatment options...
http://info.clearpassage.com/download-our-free-ebook-on-treating-blocked-fallopian-tubes-naturally?hsCtaTracking=d370ffc4-c22f-4ec1-b849-e695ca5deb99%7Cd62cb1b4-d897-445b-9259-27f89f3b29ce