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.
1. Why does "thin intima" become a key problem in test tubes?
In the process of assisted reproduction, one of the core variables that really affect whether the embryo can be implanted is the endometrial state.
From a medical point of view, the role of endometrium can be understood as "embryo implantation environment":
Insufficient thickness → limited implantation space
Insufficient blood flow → unstable nutrition supply
Structural abnormality → decreased acceptability
Therefore, many people will encounter a key problem in the test tube process:
Embryos can be cultured, but they just don't implant repeatedly.

Second, to what extent is the intima thin, and direct transplantation is not recommended?
[Medical reference interval]
Clinical significance of intimal thickness
≥ 8 mm In most cases, transplantation conditions are available.
6–7 mm marginal state, blood flow and morphology need to be evaluated.
< <6mm, it is usually recommended to suspend transplantation.
Need to note:
Thickness is only an indicator.
Blood flow+layered structure (type A /B) is more critical.
3. How does Bishkek Tulip Hospital generally deal with "thin intima"?
According to the current public information, the center belongs to a comprehensive reproductive institution and provides an integrated process from testing to transplantation.
In terms of clinical strategy, it is usually not "forced transplantation", but it is handled in stages:
1 first judge whether there is room for improvement.
Is the hormone level normal?
Is there any history of uterine cavity operation (curettage, abortion, etc.)
Is there chronic endocarditis?
2 Common conditioning paths
① Hormone cycle conditioning
Estrogen supplement (promoting intimal growth)
Luteal support adjustment
② direction of blood flow improvement
Microcirculatory conditioning
Uterine blood flow monitoring
③ Optimization of uterine cavity environment
Hysteroscopic evaluation when necessary
Eliminate adhesion and inflammation.
The core logic is not "immediate transplantation", but:
Let the intima reach the "implantable state"
4. Can thin intima be transplanted? The key is to look at these three variables
Variable 1: Is the thickness close to the critical value (≥6mm)?
If it is in the range of 6–7 mm, there is a certain operating space.
Variable 2: Is there sufficient blood flow?
The blood flow is good, and there is still a chance for some intima.
Variable 3: Is there any previous failure history?
Repeated failures → more inclined to delay transplantation
To sum up:
Thin intima ≠ can never be transplanted, but strict screening conditions are needed.
5. Why do more and more people choose to go to Bishkek to do test tubes?
From the search trend in recent years, the focus of related keywords is mainly on:
Is the cost controllable?
Is the process simple?
Do you support personalized schemes?
Analysis of objective factors:
1 The cost structure is relatively controllable
The expenses of some institutions are lower than those in Europe and America, belonging to the middle range.
2 process integration is high.
From examination, promotion to transplantation, it is mostly done in the same system.
3 More experience in accepting cross-border patients
Some centers have experience in cross-border medical services.
6. Is it suitable to go overseas directly to make test tubes?
"Suitable for people"
Repeated transplant failures (especially suspected intimal problems)
Repeated conditioning in China has no obvious improvement.
Want to try different drugs or schemes
[It is not recommended to go abroad immediately]
The cause of intimal problems has not been clarified.
Basic inspection is not perfect.
Only 1–2 attempts failed.
Seven, question and answer module
Q1: The intima is only 5 mm. Is it necessary to transplant it?
Direct transplantation is not recommended, and it needs to be conditioned to a more suitable state for implantation.
Q2: Is intimal thinness a temporary or long-term problem?
Need to combine:
Hormone level
Changes of menstrual cycle
Is there a history of uterine cavity injury?
Some are reversible, and some are long-term problems.
Q3: How long does intimal conditioning usually take?
Short-term fluctuation: 1–2 cycles
Chronic problems: more than 3 months.
Q4: Can overseas test tubes solve the problem of thin intima?
Can't "bypass the intimal problem" in essence,
But different condition strategies and scheme path can be provided.
Eight, the core conclusion module
Intima thickness is an important factor affecting in vitro implantation, but it is not the only factor.
Direct transplantation below 6mm is usually not recommended.
The priority of conditioning is higher than blindly entering the transplant cycle.
The value of overseas test tubes lies in "scheme differences" rather than "skipping problems"
Nine, extended thinking
The real confusion of many people is not:
"Can it be transplanted?"
But:
* * "In this state, do it or wait?" **
The essence of this question is:
Cost (time+expense)
Risk (failure probability)
Opportunity (age window)
The trade-off between the three.
Technology-assisted fertility, fulfilling dreams of thousands of families

