Depending on where you are and if your insurance will help or not-it is a good amount of money. Besides the surgery, you're looking at blood work, anesthesia, operating room costs and whether or not you have to stay the night. I would imagine you'd need antibiotics as well. You can ask your gyno for guidance, they will be able to point you in the right direction.
Wish you all the best.
The dr will basically try to reconnect what is left over of the fallopian tube with small needles and sutures, by way of camera in the belly. During surgery they test to see if the method was successful by inserting a dye through the cervix to see if it will travel through the repaired tube to and to the uterus. They are getting better with the surgery for it but still only offer that 70% chance. They would have to get in there and examine what is left of the tubes to make that determination though.
Can you tell me more about that
You can try for a tubal reversal. It's a 70% chance that it will work. And it's expensive.