Women who has undergone tubectomy can have babies by performing a sterilization reversal surgery (rejoining the fallopian tubes).
Although menstruation and ovulation are related, the movement of the egg from the ovary into the uterine cavity has no relation with the flow of menstrual blood. The egg is released usually around mid-cycle and gets propelled through the fallopian tube, where fertilisation occurs normally.In women with blocked fallopian tubes or those whose tubes were cut during surgery, the egg is released from the ovary at ovulation and absorbed within the abdominal cavity.Menstruation, on the other hand is from the endometrial cavity (inside uterine lining) and its flow is not affected by tubal blockage or absence.As such, a woman can have a normal cycle even when she has no fallopian tubes, as long as the ovaries are intact and normal.