The East Coast Tubal Reversal Center offers 35 years of combined experience in tubal ligation reversal. Dr. Bateman and Dr. Williams were named “One of the Nation’s Top Doctors” beginning in 1996 to the present, and the surgery is performed at Martha Jefferson Hospital which is among the “Top 100” Community Hospitals in America. Both of our reproductive endocrinologists, infertility specialists have extensive experience performing delicate microsurgical tubal reversal procedures.
We are also the most cost- effective program in the country with the confidence and expertise to offer a $2,000 refund guarantee if tubal reversal surgery does not successfully open at least one tube. Tubal reversal reversal surgery is extremely delicate and our reproductive surgeons have years of successful clinical experience.
We look forward to the opportunity to help you reach your goal of having another child. Surgical reversal of tubal ligation also known as tubal reanastomosis is a highly successful procedure to restore normal fertility after fallopian tube ligation (tubes have been tied). 
Until In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) became routine and successful, tubal reversal surgery was much more common. Over the last 5 years, or so, the success rates for IVF at highly-successful programs have nearly reached that of tubal reversal surgery in the best candidates. Also, some insurance companies now cover IVF. With these changes tubal ligation reversal surgery has become much less common nationally.
Going to a center with extensive experience in tubal reversal surgery is key. It is important that any woman considering tubal reversal surgery also be counseled about the benefits and drawbacks of IVF as compared to tubal reversal surgery. In the most ideal circumstances, every woman considering tubal reversal surgery would be counseled at a program that offered both options with high success rates.
East Coast Tubal Reversal Center and the Reproductive Medicine and Surgery Center of Virginia are such a place. Both Doctors Bateman and Williams are former full-time faculty at the University of Virginia School of Medicine/University of Virginia Health system. In addition to their busy clinical practices, the doctors are also actively involved in teaching resident physicians and in National Institutes of Health-supported research.
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