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  2. Tubal ligation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubal_ligation

    Anesthesia for the tubal ligation will be the same as that being used for the Cesarean section itself, usually regional or general anesthesia. If the patient delivers vaginally and desires a postpartum tubal ligation, the surgeon will remove part or all of the fallopian tubes usually one or two days after the birth, during the same hospitalization.

  3. Salpingectomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salpingectomy

    Salpingectomy was performed by Lawson Tait in 1883 in women with a bleeding ectopic pregnancy; it is now established as a routine and lifesaving procedure [clarification needed]. Other indications for a salpingectomy include infected tubes (as in a hydrosalpinx) or as part of the surgical procedure for tubal cancer. [citation needed]

  4. After Roe decision, an increased interest in sterilization ...

    www.aol.com/news/roe-decision-increased-interest...

    In a tubal ligation, the fallopian tubes are blocked, cut or tied to prevent the egg and sperm from meeting. In a bilateral salpingectomy, both fallopian tubes are removed entirely from the body.

  5. Prophylactic salpingectomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prophylactic_salpingectomy

    Potential indications for Prophylactic Salpingectomy: At the time of abdominal or pelvic surgery instead of tubal ligation or hysterectomy; Women at a high-risk of developing serous ovarian cancer due to their inheritance of a germline mutation in a cancer predisposition gene, such as BRCA1 and BRCA2, once childbearing is complete.

  6. What is tubal ligation and how does it work? Doctors explain.

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/tubal-ligation-does...

    Tubal ligation can be done via a minilaparotomy, a small abdominal cut used for a surgery in which the fallopian tubes are closed off, or laparoscopy, a surgical procedure in which a thin, lighted ...

  7. What is tubal ligation and how does it work? Doctors explain.

    www.aol.com/tubal-ligation-does-doctors-explain...

    If you're done having children or don't want them at all, you may be curious about tubal ligation, aka female sterilization. Here's what you need to know.

  8. Sterilization (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterilization_(medicine)

    Some potential risks of tubal sterilization include "bleeding from a skin incision or inside the abdomen, infection, damage to other organs inside the abdomen, side effects from anesthesia, ectopic pregnancy (an egg that becomes fertilized outside the uterus), [and] incomplete closing of a fallopian tube that results in pregnancy."

  9. States with abortion bans saw a rise in tubal sterilizations ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/states-abortion-bans-saw...

    Tubal ligation: Sometimes called getting your “tubes tied,” this procedure blocks each fallopian tube so that eggs can no longer move from the ovaries into the uterus or become fertilized by ...