When you are not pregnant your uterus is only about 3 of 4 inches, or about the size of your fist. The human uterus in a non-pregnant woman is about the size of her fist, but during pregnancy it can expand hundreds of times! weighing just a few ounces.
how much does it cost for a uterus operation
Pregnancy can occur from all acts of intercourse, even when on your period. Sperm live as much as seven days in the uterus.
Much of the content of the uterus during pregnancy is water-like amniotic fluid, in which the fetus floats.
no he's very much of a ladys man!
because the greek ladys were usually rich
.eating too much will make your stomache expand
Pregnant woman may need to urinate more often due to two reasons. The first is a change in hormones that can effect the bladder and the second is the extra weight of the uterus presses down on the bladder keeping it from holding as much urine as it did pre-pregnancy.
No. Men cannot become pregnant because they do not have the correct reproductive organs which are required, which only the female has.A transsexual man who has had some surgery but retained his uterus could possibly become pregnant. But not a biologically distinct male.Biological males cannot possibly get pregnant, as they do not have eggs nor do they have a vaginal canal or a uterus. Only a female-to-male transsexual male can get pregnant, if they chose to keep the female reproductive organs that they had at birth.* In some but not all cases, an hermaphrodite (someone born with both sexual organs) could also become pregnant if the female organs are completely functional.noNo. A biological male (with XY chromosomes) cannot give birth. In at least one exceptional case, a female to male trans-gendered individual who retained their female reproductive organs did become pregnant and brought a healthy baby to term, but biologically, the individual was still female.Not a born male, no. However, a woman who has had some gender reassignment to look like a man but who has retained a uterus can.Even with a "sex change", which only alters the genital organs, men do not normally have the eggs or uterus required. (Those that do would be true hermaphrodites, and already have a uterus.) The only way for "normal" men to bear babies would be an artificial womb, which is only beginning to be medically and technologically possible. Much of a woman's physiology is geared to providing for pregnancy, and that would all have to be engineered somehow in a male body.Where women have had babies grow outside the uterus (ectopic pregnancies), few have been successfully brought to term and delivered. The complication is that only in the uterus is a fetus fully detachable from the body of the mother.The only way a man can have a baby is if he has a sex-change operation and has a uterus implanted inside of him.Although today they don't do those transplants so men can not get pregnant.
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As much as it pains me to tell you this, it is not possible, i.e. it has never been done and I cant figure out how to do it
103 grams on average