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If there is anyone out there considering tubaligation, please make sure this is what you really want. I regret it daily. I never thought I would want more children. I was only 24 when I had the tubaligation, much too young. I have two children, I thought I was making the right decision. Thought wrong. Now I am remarried and want to have another. Do I have any other options to have another child?

2007-03-01 05:45:27 · 7 answers · asked by queenb 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Trying to Conceive

7 answers

Yes, you can become pregnant with IVF.

With IVF, drugs are used to stimulate your ovaries to produce multiple follicles/eggs (controlled ovarian hyperstimulation); the eggs are then aspirated from the mature follicles and fertilized in a petri dish; embryos are then transferred into your uterus. So: ovaries and uterus are needed, yes, but your fallopian tubes don't play a part, so having had a tubal ligation isn't an issue.

Best of luck to you.

2007-03-01 05:55:15 · answer #1 · answered by ljb 6 · 1 0

There is procedure to get your tupes untied! Many women make this mistake to get there tubes tied when they have kids really young! My aunt had 3 kids by the time she was 23 and had her tubes tied! She later remarried in her 30's and had the procedure reversed and she has two beautiful daughters born without any further assistance from a doc!! If you cant get them reversed then get a surrogant mother to carry your baby for you! Good Luck!!

2007-03-01 05:54:40 · answer #2 · answered by btinawill 2 · 0 0

You can get your tubes untied and repaired and become pregnant again because i had 2 of my friends to do that.
In all i know of 5 people that all went to the same doctor, had their tubes untied and got pregnant within a year. This doctor is the best in this type of surgery and he has a payment plan. You should really check him out. Good luck!
Dr. Richard Levin
http://www.babies-by-levin.com

2007-03-01 06:40:27 · answer #3 · answered by ஐ♥Julian'sMommy♥ஐ 7 · 0 0

Jewish regulation, Torah regulation, says that if a baby is born of a Jewish mom, the newborn is a Jew by beginning. in accordance to Torah regulation, the mummy passes down being a Jew to her children. the daddy does no longer. the daddy passes down Tribal Lineage. the mummy passes down being a Jew. So if a non-Jewish father marries a Jewish woman, their children will be Jews yet can haven't any tribal association because their father has none. yet, if a Jewish father marries a non-Jewish woman, their children at the on the spot are not Jews in accordance to Torah regulation. for this reason he won't be able to precisely bypass down his tribal lineage, because they are not Jewish children. So the youngsters have lost out on both counts there. there is not any such ingredient as being "1/2 Jewish". both someone is a Jew because their mom replaced right into a Jew, or if their mom replaced into no longer a Jew, then they don't seem a Jew. P.S. The Reform Jewish circulate, which replaced into created contained in the 1800s, has tried to regulate for themselves this Torah regulation. they have created their own regulation that announces that a baby is a Jew in the experience that they are raised in a relations the position Judaism is practiced. They did this because the intermarriage cost in Reform Judaism between Jewish adult males and non-Jewish women is up round seventy 5-80% and they are truly breeding themselves correct out of life as Jews. besides the undeniable fact that, replacing God-given Torah regulation, for themselves, does no longer replace that Torah regulation. It purely means that they don't seem following authentic Judaism, or the Torah, and are doing as they opt for to, somewhat.

2016-10-17 09:40:39 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Thank you for sharing...I have been thinking about it but i do not want to do it if i can not reverse it, and from the looks of it, it can not be reversed

2007-03-01 05:49:55 · answer #5 · answered by bree680u1 4 · 0 0

invetro would work

2007-03-01 15:08:23 · answer #6 · answered by Symbolic User 7 · 0 0

You can do invitro.

2007-03-01 05:48:54 · answer #7 · answered by Heather Y 7 · 1 0

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