A promising new birth control method for men that's more easily reversible than vasectomy has been developed in India. read more
The whole purpose of having a vasectomy is that it is permanent and not temporary like the various reversible hormonal methods. This page may be out of date. Save your draft before refreshing this page. read more
Best Answer: NO SUCH THING Vasectomy has a small but significant risk of 'failure', because any interference with the body causes a 'healing response'. When the 'vas' is cut and either tied, clipped, cauterised or glued, it will try to repair the damage. read more
But in reality, there is a risk that any vasectomy may not be reversible. Reversing a vasectomy involves a surgeon rerouting the vas deferens, restoring the internal passageway for sperm to exit the body (testicles still produce sperm after a man has a vasectomy — they just stay inside the body). read more