In the fallopian tubes or in the abdominal cavity, attaching sometimes to organs such as the kidneys or intestines.
In the uterus. It attaches it self to the uterine lining around week 2 of pregnancy and makes that its happy home till birth :)
If it's totally gone, not very likely. The egg may get fertilized, a clump of cells may form, but without the lining for it to nestle in, it won't live much longer. If you however had it removed by having your uterus scraped due to miscarriage or an abortion, you can be ovulating as soon as a week after and you are highly fertile after a pregnancy. The lining of the uterus us after all removed every month when you get your period.
It is the bonus side effect from taking hormonal BCP. The lining in the uterus is not as built up so there is less to shed.
Your little blastocyst implants into the uterine lining in the third week. Soon a placenta will begin functioning, until then your baby to be is receiving oxygen and nutrients through a very early circulatory system - microscopic channels that connect to the rich uterine lining are taking care of all his or her needs.
An egg breaks from the ovary during ovulation, it then travels down the fallopian tubes where if there are sperm present it may be fertilized and travel down to the uterus to develop into a fetus. If not fertilized the egg stays within the fallopian tube and is reabsorbed into the body.
The birth control pill can make the lining of the uterus thinner, and so you don't bleed as much during the pill-free week. Sometimes it's just spotting.
Endometrial polyps are growths in the lining of the uterus (endometrium) that are usually noncancerous. They can cause symptoms like abnormal bleeding, especially between periods or after menopause. Treatment may involve removal of the polyps if they are causing symptoms.
Yes you can spot during the first week of you pregnancy. The egg is being planted into the uterus.
During development, an embryo is embedded in the endometrial lining of the uterus. This lining provides nutrients and support for the growing embryo as it continues to develop into a fetus. The process of implantation is crucial for successful pregnancy to occur.
Ultrasound.
The Menstruation Cycle has a specific beginning, middle, end, and repeats almost the same every month. Bleeding begins/ends, the uterus begins preparing for the egg, the egg is released, if not fertilized the uterus sheds the extra lining... bleeding begins, ends, the "cycle" begins again. A cycle can be off a day or week, or skipped, but when it resumes, it begins the same steps.