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Not All Natural Remedies Work the Same for Blocked Fallopian Tubes — Here's What You Need to Know


In This Article, You'll Learn:

  • Why hydrosalpinx and adhesions are different
  • Why some natural remedies fail
  • The three categories of tubal blockage I commonly see
  • What women with adhesions should focus on

Since 2020, I have met hundreds of women dealing with blocked fallopian tubes and have worked closely with many of them.

In the early days, the women I came across most were those whose tubes were blocked by adhesions. Women dealing with hydrosalpinx were fewer — at least among those reaching out to me at the time.

I didn't fully understand the difference until more women with hydrosalpinx began contacting me privately for help. Without realising it, I was applying the same strategy I used for adhesions to women with hydrosalpinx — essentially a one-size-fits-all approach.

How a Key Lesson Changed Everything

My first 4 success stories were all from women with adhesions or blocked tubes caused by adhesions.

Then one lady with hydrosalpinx joined my private programme. I applied the same principles, and we made some progress — but it wasn't enough.

I went deeper into research on the natural management of hydrosalpinx and came across studies from Iran on how it was being managed, including the use of sitz baths. I recommended this to her alongside herbal teas. At some point, she travelled and returned with herbal medicine given to her by a local practitioner.

One particular herb she brought back caught my attention immediately. I recognised its potential impact and could see what the long-term effect might be. I quickly developed my own version of that herbal approach to use with future clients dealing with hydrosalpinx.

From that point forward, I had 6 to 7 success stories from women with hydrosalpinx — five of whom conceived and delivered.

In addition, two more ladies with adhesions blocking their tubes conceived and are moms today, while two others with patent tubes but pelvic adhesions, which had made conception elusive for years, are also moms today.

A Painful Turning Point

Sadly, the very woman who taught me this herbal lesson suddenly fell ill after taking a herbal tea and immediately doing a sitz bath. Her condition deteriorated rapidly, and she was rushed to hospital for emergency care (sometime in 2021).

She ended up having surgery to remove one of her ovaries, which had been completely damaged by a Tubo-Ovarian Abscess (TOA).

After that experience, her interest in natural remedies gradually faded — understandably so, out of fear.

She had been married for over ten years and struggling with infertility. Although she came to me for help, we were unable to complete what we started together.

Her case was a major turning point for me. It made me realise that the successful natural management of hydrosalpinx requires a distinct approach — different from what works for adhesions.

In my experience, women with hydrosalpinx often benefit more from targeted herbal and infection-focused approaches, whereas women with adhesion-related blockage usually require greater emphasis on physical therapies and other supportive strategies.

Three Groups I Now Work With

Since then, I have learned to separate tubal blockage cases into distinct groups:

Group 1 — Women with Adhesions

Women whose tubes are blocked primarily by scar tissue and adhesions.

Group 2 — Women with Hydrosalpinx

Women whose tubes are blocked or damaged due to fluid-filled fallopian tubes, often associated with chronic infection or inflammation.

Group 3 — Women with Both Conditions

Women who have one tube affected by hydrosalpinx and the other blocked by adhesions.

I observed this third group over time through my work with different women. It is more complex and requires a modified approach.

For over five years now, whenever a woman comes to me for help, I always try to determine the nature of her blockage first.

That tells me which group she belongs to and guides how I help her.

This way, I go straight to the most effective natural remedies — whether for adhesions, for hydrosalpinx, or a combination of both.



Important Note:
This is not a formal medical classification of tubal blockage. It is a practical framework I developed based on my observations, research, and experience working with women facing different forms of tubal-factor infertility.

The Key Lesson for You

Not all natural remedies work for both adhesions and hydrosalpinx.

Some remedies are particularly effective for adhesions. Others are more suited to hydrosalpinx.

When a woman keeps applying remedies targeting adhesions while dealing with hydrosalpinx, she may not get the results she is hoping for.

The same is true in reverse — focusing on herbal teas for adhesions when physical therapy should be the priority will also fall short.

If Your Tubes Are Blocked by Adhesions — Read This

If your tubes are confirmed to be blocked by adhesions, understand this clearly:

Most herbs alone cannot break down adhesions.

In my experience, herbs alone are usually insufficient to resolve significant adhesions without additional supportive approaches.

Chasing one herb after another in the hope of clearing scar tissue is unlikely to give you the result you want.

Instead of focusing solely on what herbs to drink, learn more about the following options:

  • Laparoscopic surgery
  • Physical therapy (e.g. yoga, castor oil therapy, fertility massage, acupuncture)
  • Systemic enzymes
  • Anti-inflammatory diet
  • Specific herbal teas (e.g. combination teas, Chinese herbal teas like Yimucao & Xixian Cao, etc.) — as a supportive element, not a standalone solution

Why Women Say "It Didn't Work for Me"

When a woman says Serrapeptase (a systemic enzyme) didn't work for her, there are two likely explanations.

She may have had severe adhesions but relied on Serrapeptase alone, waiting for results that never came. Looking closely, her diet might also have been highly inflammatory.

Or she may have had an infection-related blockage like hydrosalpinx and used only Serrapeptase and some herbs — without detoxing, treating the infection thoroughly, or modifying her diet.

In that situation, systemic enzymes are simply not the right tool for that condition.

The Same Applies to Herbs

When a woman says she tried herbs and got no result, it often means she was drinking various herbal teas hoping to break down adhesions — which common herbs generally cannot do.

Or she was drinking general herbs while there was active infection and hydrosalpinx present, making the approach counterproductive.

In both cases, the issue is not that the remedy is useless — it is that the remedy was not matched to the right type of blockage.

There is also another common mistake:

Applying a single natural treatment in isolation rather than combining multiple approaches consistently, logically, and over a sufficient period of time.

Many women are essentially using the wrong remedies for their specific condition, or the right remedies in the wrong way, and end up seeing no results despite genuine effort and commitment.

What I Have Observed Over the Years

I have worked with over 6 women whose tubes were blocked by adhesions using a combination of the above options (excluding laparoscopic surgery for most of them), and they are mothers today.

One of them had even undergone laparoscopic surgery before coming to me, but it had not yielded the desired result.

Over the years, through research and hands-on experience with different women, I have developed a structured approach to addressing adhesions naturally — one that has produced consistent results.

Women who had been trying to conceive for years became pregnant within 3 to 6 months of applying the ideas shared with them.

If you would like to see proof, read through the success stories on this blog.

They clearly show what these women did to unblock their tubes and conceive — so that before you apply any natural treatment or buy any supplement, you will know whether it can address your specific type of blockage.

Here Are a Few Questions to Think About Deeply

  • Are you drinking more supplements or herbs when you should be applying physical therapy?
  • Are you applying only one natural approach when you should be combining at least three or more?
  • Is your diet under control, or is your focus only on fast solutions?

What's Coming Next

In my next post, I will share specific ideas on what works for hydrosalpinx — although I have touched on this in earlier posts.

Everything I write here comes from first-hand observation and experience gained from helping women unblock their tubes naturally.

Based on the results I have consistently seen, I am confident sharing what works and why.

The main challenge most women face is impatience.

Natural healing takes time, and some are not willing to let the process run its full course.

That patience, more often than not, is what separates those who get results from those who don't.

If you have been diagnosed with hydrosalpinx, adhesions, or both, leave a comment below or contact me.

Understanding the nature of your blockage is often the first step toward choosing the right strategy.

Efe Abu


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 programme.


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