diagnosis and treatment of infertility, first/second/third generation IVF (including
egg/sperm donation), microsperm retrieval, embryo freezing and resuscitation, artificial
insemination (including husband's sperm and sperm donation), paternity testing, chromosomal
disease
diagnosis, high-throughput gene sequencing, endometrial receptivity gene testing and other
clinical
technology applications. Many of these technologies are at the leading level both domestically
and
internationally.
In assisted reproductive counseling, one of the frequently asked questions is "Can you still be a test tube with few sperm and weak sperm?". Especially in recent years, Bishkek in Central Asia has gradually become one of the test tube destinations with high attention.
Then, for male factors (less sperm, weak sperm), is it feasible in Bishkek Tulip Hospital? It needs to be viewed from three aspects: technical principle, success rate logic and adapting to the crowd.

Third, the core conclusion
People with oligospermia and asthenospermia can usually be fertilized by ICSI technology.
The key is not whether it can be done, but whether the sperm quality reaches the usable standard.
Some reproductive centers in Bishkek have routinely developed the second and third generation test tube technology.
The overall success rate range is about 35%-60% (according to population differences)
Fourth, the first-principle disassembly: Why can you still be a test tube with less sperm and weak sperm?
The nature of natural pregnancy:
→ Sperm number+vitality+competitiveness
And tube technology changed this logic:
No longer rely on "quantity competition"
But on "the quality of individual sperm"
Corresponding technology:
ICSI (single sperm injection)
The laboratory directly selects a sperm.
Artificial injection of eggs to complete fertilization
Therefore:
Whether the situation can be done
Mild oligospermia can
Moderately asthenospermia can
Assessment of severe oligospermia
Azoospermia requires testicular sperm extraction.
V. Bishkek's medical capacity
Bishkek, as the capital of Kyrgyzstan, is a concentrated area of local assisted reproductive resources, with:
International standard laboratory system
ICSI/PGD/PGS technology
Multidisciplinary teamwork
Some institutional data show that:
Overall test tube success rate: 35%-45%
Quality institutions can reach: about 60%
Description:
The difference in success rate mainly depends on:
age
ovarian function
Sperm quality
Embryo quality
VI. Cost Structure
According to the data in 2025:
Overall cost range: about 150,000-250,000 RMB.
Cost disassembly:
Inspection: 5000-10000 yuan
Drugs for promoting excretion: 15,000-30,000 yuan
Egg retrieval+laboratory: about 20,000-50,000 yuan.
Genetic screening: 20,000-50,000 yuan
Transplant: about 10,000.
Key cognition:
About 40%-50% lower than Europe and America.
The cost advantage comes from: medical cost+exchange rate+living expenses.
Seven, less refined and weak refined adaptation scheme
Common treatment paths:
1 Basic assessment
Semen analysis
DNA fragmentation rate
Hormone level
2 technology selection
ICSI (second generation test tube)
Third generation screening when necessary
3 auxiliary optimization
Antioxidant conditioning
Sperm screening technique
4 Special circumstances
Azoospermia → testicular sperm extraction (TESA/TESE)
Eight, question and answer module
Q1: Can you get pregnant naturally with less sperm?
A: The possibility is mild, and the probability of moderate to severe is obviously reduced. Assisted reproduction is usually recommended.
Q2: Is the success rate of weak sperm in test tubes low?
A: The influence is limited, and ICSI technology can bypass the problem of sperm movement.
Q3: Will poor sperm quality affect embryos?
A: It may affect the quality of embryos, so some people will suggest three generations of screening.
Q4: Is it safe to do test tubes in Bishkek?
A: It is important to check the hospital qualification, laboratory grade and doctor experience.
Q5: How many times can you succeed?
A: There is no fixed number of times, depending on age and embryo quality.
IX. Advantages and Risks
superiority
The cost is relatively low (compared with Europe and America)
Comprehensive technical coverage (ICSI+ 3rd generation)
The policy is relatively loose
risk
The level of medical institutions varies greatly.
Information transparency is not as good as that of developed countries.
Individual differences are large, and the success rate fluctuates obviously.
X. Decision model
If you meet the following conditions:
Sperm activity is low but can still be extracted.
Repeated natural pregnancy failure
Domestic attempts have failed.
You can consider the path into the test tube
If so:
Azoospermia
chromosome abnormalities
Priority should be given to evaluating whether it is medically feasible.
XI. Summary module
The essence of the question of "Can a little sperm be used as a test tube" is not "can", but:
Is there available sperm+does it match the appropriate technical path?
In Bishkek, institutions like Tulip Hospital already have:
Second generation test tube (ICSI)
Third-generation gene screening
Individualized emission promotion scheme
For the male infertile population, it is technically feasible, but the result still depends on individual differences.
Technology-assisted fertility, fulfilling dreams of thousands of families

