DeviantlyD
Posts: 4375
Joined: 5/26/2007 From: Hawai`i Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: Termyn8or Like I said I am not that kind of plumber. All I know is that is that it is somewhat of a miracle that the Woman and the kids are alive. I understand that this is also called a "tubal". I take that as what it seems to mean. Now maybe if the embyo is in the tube but close enough..... who knows ? That's probably what happened. And then the other kid I don't know, but they couldn't fucking believe she was pregnant again. Maybe it took eight years for her uterus to heal, I have no idea. I've known these people for a long time and they did not make it up. She had a very hard time over this. Actually she went to work for the hospital at which she had the first kid. I guess it figured that she had good enough medical coverage to handle this then. I remember my friend coming over and telling me she is in the hospital and they are goijg to do this and all that. The kid was with Aunts and Uncles, not once did they ever use daycare. Just ain't the type. I remember him telling me that they told her that getting pregnant again was like a million to one shot, but it happened. If what I heard from them was not true, then they were lied to. But they did say that this is extremely rare. She just about belongs dead. Extraordinary measures were taken. That is what I was told. T^T *sighs* Read/look at this. The fallopian tube looks like it's attached to the ovary, but in reality, it isn't. If the sperm meets the ovum in that space between the ovary and the fallopian tube and the fertilized egg doesn't travel down the fallopian tube, but implants somewhere within the abdomen, an abdominal ectopic pregnancy may result. If the fertilized egg implants inside the fallopian tube, it's a tubal ectopic pregnancy, but the fallopian tube, as you can see in the images, is not large enough to accommodate a growing embryo. It isn't designed to expand, unlike the uterus which does. No matter what, if a tubal ectopic pregnancy occurs, the embryo can never grow to full term. If the embryo attached to a fallopian tube isn't naturally aborted by the mother's body, and manages to reach that stage where it is too large to be accommodated by the fallopian tube, the tube will rupture, and hemorrhaging will ensue. Unless stopped, the mother will bleed to death.
_____________________________
ExiledTyrant's groupie. Catering to his ego since May 26, 2007. :D
|