After 10 years of ligation, tubal reopening is possible, but there is no guarantee that the reopened tubes will have normal function.
Ligation is a bilateral tubal ligation performed by women for contraception. The method is to ligate the isthmus of both fallopian tubes and remove about 1cm of the tubal lumen to achieve the purpose of permanent contraception.
When a woman after sterilization has a request to have children again, she will have to undergo tubal reversal, clinically called tubal anastomosis. Tubal anastomosis after ligation has little to do with the number of years of ligation, so 10 years after ligation can still perform tubal anastomosis.
Tubal anastomosis sews the two ends of the tubal lumen together and anastomoses the ends, so that the reopened fallopian tube can form a channel, so that the sperm and egg can meet and achieve the purpose of conception again. However, if a woman has a combination of diseases such as pelvic inflammatory disease, she may not be able to conceive normally even after the tubes have been reopened.
After ligation, if you have a request to have another child, you must make good preoperative preparation and preoperative evaluation under the guidance of a professional doctor in order to prepare for tubal anastomosis.