A quick answer is yes, but it may not always be easy as the following testimonial shows. ๐
This story happened recently. I live in Benin City, Southern Nigeria, while she lives about 500 kilometers away in the Eastern region of the country. Like every other testimonial on this blog, I never met her in person; our interaction was solely through chats and phone calls. Her communication with me began on October 8th, and by December 7th, 2025, her situation had changed for good.
When I created this blog in August 2025, I began sharing it quietly in a few Facebook groups and on X (formerly Twitter). Whenever women asked questions about blocked fallopian tubes or infertility, I responded based on natural healing principles—encouraging dietary changes, lifestyle modification, and supportive approaches such as fertility massage, castor oil therapy, yoga, acupuncture, and herbal support.
Over time, two women reached out to me privately from those groups (October 2025). One of them would later leave a lasting impression on me.
๐Can PID cause blocked fallopian tubes?
Her Medical History: “Both Tubes Are Open — But Nothing Is Happening”
This woman told me she had undergone an HSG earlier in the year (April 2025). The result showed that both fallopian tubes were open, but she had pelvic adhesions. Aside from high prolactin, there were no other issues she was aware of.
For over three years, she and her partner had been trying to conceive—without success. She was frustrated, emotionally exhausted, and desperate for answers.
I told her honestly that the only way I could work with her closely was through my private fertility program. When she asked about the cost, she said she couldn’t afford it at the time. And besides, she had spent alot of money on numerious treatment ideas in the past without any results to show for it.
I respected that and encouraged her to at least join my free WhatsApp group, where I share educational guidance and where several women—now mothers—were once participants in the private program.
She joined the group. I also shared the contact of someone who had faced a similar challenge but now has two children, to motivate her to explore natural approaches. Behind the scenes, however, there was pressure.
IVF Was Already on the Table
Her partner had already decided that IVF was the next step. They had attended IVF consultations months earlier, and within six weeks, the process was expected to begin.
Yet she was anxious. Her concern wasn’t just conception—it was whether her pelvic adhesions might also affect IVF outcomes. She was torn between fear, hope, and time running out.
That same week, I published a blog post comparing Pelvic adhesions vs. Asherman syndrome . Unknown to me, she read it carefully. After reading the article, she contacted me again.
She told me she didn’t want to take chances with IVF. She wanted to address the root issue first. Then she joined my private program immediately.
The Work Began: Addressing What HSG Doesn’t Show
From the start, I outlined a structured plan:
- Dietary modification toward a vegetable-dominant diet
- Increased fruit intake
- Yoga and pelvic-focused exercises (1 hour daily)
- Continued castor oil therapy (which she was already familiar with)
- Fertility massage
- Herbal teas (with Combo Fertility tea as the foundation)
For Fertility massage , she searched for and found a traditional birth attendant who offered the service. She completed one session for a fee and reported feeling deep pelvic pain during the process. The pain lasted about 24 hours. I then advised her not to return to the same attendant and to continue with gentle self-massage at home.
During her menstrual periods, I gave her a specific cleansing recipe, to be used only during menstruation. After her period, she returned to her fertility teas and supportive regimen.
Time was not on her side. Her partner strongly believed she could not conceive naturally, and IVF felt inevitable.
The Turning Point: Systemic Cleansing and Unexpected Changes
The herbs for one key protocol I recommended—an herbal, bowel-supportive cleansing protocol designed to support elimination and pelvic health—were not available in her city. She sent me funds, and I sourced the herbs and Acupressure slippers , then waybilled them to her.
Within two days, she received everything and began the protocol. For two weeks, her body responded noticeably. She experienced:
- Large amounts of mucus
- Thick, stretchy discharges
- Fluids and substances she had never observed before
Day after day, her system released material—until eventually, nothing more came out. She herself was shocked. Such changes can reflect shifts in elimination patterns, mucus production, and inflammatory response.
Resistance, Fear, and a Secret She Felt Forced to Keep
When her partner returned from Germany, she stopped the herbs. He was strongly opposed to herbal remedies and did not want her taking anything “natural.”
To avoid conflict, she paused the daily routine she had followed for over a month and discontinued the herbs. She even told him I was a medical doctor so he wouldn’t stop her entirely from making juice drinks.
Meanwhile, they proceeded with semen analysis and IVF preparation. Her plan was that if she didn’t conceive that cycle, they would proceed with IVF.
Yet something unexpected began to happen.
Read๐They Did Surgery for Fallopian Tubes Removal
The Signs Appeared — Too Early to Believe
From around ovulation, she started reporting symptoms:
- Breast tenderness
- Lower back pain
- Cramps
- Headaches
- Nausea
- Pelvic discomfort
- Fevers
The symptoms came and went. At first, I told her honestly that it was too early to mean anything. Hormones can play tricks, especially under stress. But the symptoms persisted.
As her expected period approached, I advised her to take a pregnancy test. She refused, explaining that the emotional pain of repeated negative tests in the past had been too much. She wasn’t ready to be disappointed again.
Eventually, she agreed—but later admitted something important.
See๐She conceived naturally at 39 after unblocking tubes
The Test She Didn’t Take — And the One That Changed Everything
On the day she was supposed to test, she sent me a photo of a negative pregnancy strip. I told her it appeared negative and reassured her that hormones could explain her symptoms.
Four days later, she confessed. She had not tested at all. She had sent me a screenshot of a negative test from the internet because she feared I would pressure her. The symptoms were still there, and she was afraid to hope.
The next day—after her period failed to arrive—she finally tested. A faint second line appeared. I told her immediately: this is positive. A few days later, a blood test confirmed it.
She was pregnant.
The Aftermath: From “Impossible” to Marriage Plans Restored
Her joy was overwhelming. She and her partner were stunned.
To understand the weight of this: her partner lives abroad and comes to Nigeria only occasionally—usually timing visits around her ovulation window. This year alone, he visited about four times. After three years, he had lost hope of natural conception and wanted IVF. He had delayed formal marriage plans until she conceived—either naturally or through IVF—due to pressure from family and friends.
Yet just as IVF preparations were about to begin, she conceived naturally.
Since that confirmation:
- Her partner’s excitement has been boundless
- The marriage plans that had been suspended for years are now firm
- By God’s grace, they will become husband and wife in 2026
The Lessons This Story Teaches
This woman had two open fallopian tubes, yet she did not conceive until focused attention was given to pelvic adhesions, inflammation, and overall pelvic health.
The second lesson is that meaningful improvement often requires time, consistency, and a willingness to invest effort and resources—whether through natural approaches, medical care, or both.
So the question must be asked: if conception was elusive for a woman with two open tubes, how much more attention might be needed for a woman with one blocked tube and one open tube?
An open tube does not necessarily mean a healthy pelvic environment, and fertility is rarely just about what imaging shows. Read the next post to find out why a woman with one blocked tube and one open tube may find it difficult to conceive.
Efe
Next post๐(coming soon)
Disclaimer: This information is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any new remedy, supplement, or health program.


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