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IVF & Infertility Treatment Cost in India

In vitro fertilization (IVF) is one of the several techniques available to help couples with fertility problems to have a baby.

The estimated cost of IVF in India ranges from 4,500 USD to 5,500 USD per cycle.

The cost of treatment may also differ from one hospital to another depending upon the infrastructure, test facilities, and surgeon, etc. Accommodation can be arranged in the hotels and guest houses located near to the hospitals and the cost may vary from USD 25-100 depending upon the patient’s choices.

 

IVF & Infertility Treatment Hospitals in India

IVF & Infertility Treatment

In-vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment is a process by which an egg is fertilized by sperm outside the body. The process involves monitoring a woman’s ovulatory process, removing ovum or ova (egg or eggs) from the woman’s ovaries and letting sperm fertilize them in a fluid medium in a laboratory and then transferring it to the patient’s uterus with the intention of establishing a successful pregnancy. The first successful birth of a “test tube baby”, Louise Brown, occurred in 1978. Louise Brown was born as a result of natural cycle IVF. Robert G. Edwards, the physiologist who developed the treatment, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2010.

Why IVF Is Needed?
In vitro fertilization (IVF) is one of several techniques available to help couples with fertility problems to have a baby.
Those Fertility Problems Include:

Endometriosis
Low sperm counts
Problems with the uterus or fallopian tubes
Problems with ovulation
Antibody problems that harm sperm or eggs
The inability of sperm to penetrate or survive in the cervical mucus
An unexplained fertility problem

 

Who Can Have IVF?

  • Women under 40 years should be offered three cycles of IVF treatment on the NHS if :
  • You have been trying to get pregnant through regular unprotected intercourse for two years.
  • You have never had IVF treatment before.
  • You have not been able to get pregnant after 12 cycles of artificial insemination.
  • You and your doctor have discussed the risks of fertility treatment and pregnancy in women ages 40 years or older.

How IVF is performed

Step one:

Suppressing the natural monthly cycle:

You are given a drug that will suppress your natural menstrual cycle. This is given either as a daily injection (which you’ll be taught to give yourself) or as a nasal spray. You continue this for about two weeks.

Step two:

Boosting the egg supply

Once your natural cycle is suppressed, you take a fertility hormone called FSH (follicle stimulating hormone). These fertility hormones are known as Gonadotrophins. This is another daily injection that you give yourself, usually for about 12 days, but it can vary depending on your response.

Step three:

Checking on progress

The clinic will keep an eye on you throughout the drug treatment. You will have vaginal ultrasound scans to monitor your ovaries and, in some cases, blood tests. About 34-36 hours before your eggs are due to be collected, you’ll have a final hormone injection that helps your eggs to mature.

Step four:

Collecting the eggs

For the egg collection, you’ll be sedated and your eggs will be collected under ultrasound guidance. This involves a needle being inserted through the vagina and into each ovary. The eggs are then collected through the needle.

Step five:

Fertilizing the eggs

The eggs that have been collected are mixed with your partner’s or the donor’s sperm in the laboratory. After 16-20 hours they’re checked to see if any have been fertilized.

The cells that have been fertilized (embryos) continue to grow in the laboratory for one to five days before being transferred into the womb. The best one or two embryos will be chosen for transfer.

After egg collection, you will be given medicines, either progesterone or hCG (chorionic gonadotrophin), to help prepare the lining of the womb to receive the embryo. This is given either as a pessary (which is placed inside the vagina) or an injection

Step six:

Embryo transfer

Women under 37 in their first IVF cycle should only have a single embryo transfer. In their second IVF cycle, they should have a single embryo transfer if one or more top-quality embryos are available. In the third IVF cycle, no more than two embryos should be transferred. Women aged 37–39 years in the first and second full IVF cycles should also have single embryo transfer no more than two embryos should be transferred. For women aged 40-42 years, double embryo transfer can be considered.

All multiple embryo replacements carry the risk of multiple pregnancy and birth.

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