When many women go to the hospital for gynecological examinations in their daily lives, they may hear doctors say that their fallopian tubes are open but extremely obstructed. However, many patients are not very familiar with this situation, so it is easy to delay treatment when it occurs. So why are the fallopian tubes so tight and blocked?
Everyone knows that female pregnancy is caused by the male sperm passing through the female fallopian tube and meeting with the female egg to form a fertilized egg. Therefore, the fallopian tubes play a very important role in female reproductive function. When inflammation occurs in the fallopian tubes or pelvic inflammatory disease occurs, it can easily lead to adhesions or complete blockage of the fallopian tubes, resulting in infertility. In this case, the fallopian tubes are open but extremely obstructed.
Abnormalities in the fallopian tubes can easily affect women's future fertility, such as blockage, adhesion, and hydrosalpinx, which are common tubal diseases mainly caused by inflammation of the fallopian tubes. When the inflammation infection does not completely block the fallopian tube lumen and the fallopian tubes are extremely obstructed, it can not only cause infertility, but also pose a risk of tubal pregnancy.
When a woman suffers from blocked fallopian tubes, it can easily lead to the inability of the fertilized egg to be transported to the uterus and implant smoothly, forcing the fertilized egg to stay in the fallopian tubes, which can result in ectopic pregnancy in women. Ectopic pregnancy has a significant impact on women's health, so when pregnant women experience ectopic pregnancy, timely measures must be taken.