Because periods are controlled by hormones from your ovaries and form in your uterus. When you get your tubes tied it just severs the path the egg takes but everything else is still intact. A partial or full historectomy or menopause will stop periods permanantly.
Tying of tubes is a purely physical process. The Fallopian tubes running from the ovaries to the uterus are tied/clipped/burned, so the egg and sperm cannot meet. The hormones which cause a period are a chemical process whereby they go straight into the bloodstream and affect the ovaries and uterus. The egg is still released and the uterus prepares to receive it when fertilised, so as the egg is not fertilised the lining of the uterus is shed in a period.
Your body is still releasing eggs every month and when it is released, a hormone is released as well. This hormone tells the brain to prepare for pregnancy, which the body does by lining the uterine walls with blood. If there is no implantation (no pregnancy) the blood is shed as the hormones return to normal levels (your period).
Getting the tubes tied means cutting or blocking the fallopian tubes so that sperm cannot swim up to reach the egg when a woman ovulates. The women will still ovulate as normal and her uterus will still respond to hormonal changes as normal which includes plumping up and then shedding when she doesn't get pregnant. This is one of the advantages of getting tubes tied, it is a long-term Birth Control option that doesn't mess with your normal menstrual cycles.
well this discussion is un answered.thanks love, lindsay and rae rae.
yes, unless you have a hysterectomy
Tubal Ligation has nothing to do with menstruation. It is just blocking the fallopian tubes through surgery using one of several different methods.. A woman who has had her tubes tied will still have her period. The fallopian tubes are not connected to the uterus. Chances of being pregnant are very small, but the only way to know for sure is with a pregnancy test.
yes you can be pregnant with tubes tied but after a surgery called tubal reversal
If a woman gets her tubes tied (tubal ligation) she will not be able to get pregnant, but she will still menstruate (have her period). In a tubal ligation the fallopian tubes trhat carry the egg from the ovary to the uterus are cut, but the ovaries themselves aren't removed. Since the ovaries are still producing hormones, the walls of the uterus will continue to cycle through its changes, and a period will occur.
Yes, you will still get periods if you have a blocked fallopian tube. The fallopian tubes do not determine the timing, existence, or quality of your period. Even without tubes, you would menstruate.
Not only girls get the period, boys also have a period of the month when their hormones have a surge. However, only in girls the period shows with bleeding because only girls have a body prepared to bear babies. Menstruation is the shedding of the lining in the uterus. This lining protects the baby when you're pregnant, and that's why you don't get your period when you're pregnant.The Menstrual CycleThe menstrual cycle is the process by which a woman's body gets ready for the chance of a pregnancy each month. The average menstrual cycle is 28 days from the start of one to the start of the next, but it can range from 21 days to 35 days.In the beginning of the menstrual cycle, levels of estrogen rise, causing the lining of the uterus to grow and get thicker. An egg starts to mature in one of the ovaries. Around the middle of the cycle, the egg leaves the ovary, a process called ovulation.The egg begins to travel down the fallopian tubes to the uterus. If the egg becomes fertilized by a sperm cell and attaches to the uterus, the woman becomes pregnant. If not, the uterus does not need the extra thick lining and it begins to shed.This shedding of the uterine lining through the vagina is menstruation. It is followed by the formation of a new lining.
You will still menstruate when you have your tubes tied because your menstrual cycle is still working as it would normally and your uterus is still present. You may experience some irregular bleeding if you're close to menopause or for a few days after your tubes are tied as a result of surgery. If irregular bleeding continues then you need to go talk to your doctor to find out why this is happening.
It depends if you had this procedure done in Mexico then they must of taken out your ovaries because that's what they usually do out there. Or you could probably be going through menopause.
If sperm does not fertilize an egg that is released from the fallopian tubes each month, the uterus sheds its inner lining each month which is known as the menstrual period.
A woman still gets a period after having her tubes removed or tied because she still has her ovaries which is what cause her to have a menstrual cycle. She still has her womb as well, and that is where the blood builds up, waiting for the body to signal that a pregnancy has not occured. If the womb has been removed and the ovaries left in place, the woman will not bleed but will still feel normal cyclical monthly changes.
I believe it is when your ovaries are traveling down the fallopian tubes.
of course, the monthly shedding come from the lining of the uterus ________________________ Removing the fallopian tubes (the passage from the ovaries to the uterus, called a "tubal ligation") will prevent a woman from having children, but she would still have monthly menstrual periods.
Yes. I have hydrosapinx on both tubes and I have always had regular periods (every 28 days)
A woman's period is tied to the growth of lining in the womb, which is controlled by hormones produced by the ovaries. Even though the egg cannot reach the womb after the tubes are tied, the hormones controlling the cycle are still produced, so the cycle should still be regular.
Tubal Ligation is when the fallopian tubes are tied, cut, or blocked somehow to stop them from getting pregnant. This does not stop the menstrual cycle as women still ovulate and the uterus lining still plumps and sheds as it would normally.
When it is traveling down the tubes, which is generally a 3 or 4 day period 14 days before the periods.
Everybody's body is significantaly different.The lining around your uterus doesn't have anything to do with your tubes being tied.Now some people have irregular cycles after having a tubal.If you don't have a cycle you may have something else going on otherwise everything should proceed as it was.
the answer is yes i had my tubes tied and burned two years ago and i still get a period every month