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How much does it cost to get sperm count tested? 

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In response, promising simplified sperm testing devices, able to provide cost-effective point-of-care male infertility diagnosis are prospected as a plausible solution to resolve variability and increase access to sperm testing.
Hopefully, PSV measurement may give more conclusive data to predict sperm count.
These data indicate large within- and between-subject variation in sperm parameters, especially sperm count, in both patients and healthy donors, and further substantiate the need for measurement of multiple ejaculates before characterizing a man as normal or infertile.
Sperm quality can be measured by, one of which, sperm count.
CASA methodology in general provides a more reproducible (less variable) analysis than the manual microscopic method for assessing sperm count and motility.
When the average total motile sperm count was under 10 million, IVF with ICSI was more cost-effective than IUI in our clinic.
Significant cost saving will occur in shifting the paradigm for sperm testing from laboratory microscope to a handheld immunodiagnostic device for home use.
The woman's age and number of sperm present for insemination are significant factors influencing cost-effectiveness.
It is concluded that the proposed method is cost effective and is possible to serve as a protocol for rapid sperm quantitative assessment.
This study revealed that inherent errors abound when different counting chambers are used for sperm count.
We conclude that accessory sperm count can be used for the detection of compensable defects in sperm and is a valid parameter for assessing sperm fertilization capacity.
We find remarkable similarities in sperm count distributions in cohorts of fertile men from 1951 and 1971 to 1994.