Is Your IVF Lab's Cryogenic Setup Actually Working? Here Is How to Tell




Most IVF labs do not have a liquid nitrogen problem. They have a system problem.

Tanks, vessels, dewars: that equipment works. What creates friction are the cryogenic accessories around it. Missing gloves. Disorganised canes. A storage vessel that made sense when patient volume was lower and now slows everything down.

Cryolab recently published a proper breakdown of what a well-functioning cryogenic lab system looks like. It covers liquid nitrogen storage vessels (including 20L dewars and high-capacity CryoNest options for larger programmes), sperm analysis equipment for UK labs, CBS High Security Vitrification Kits, oocyte vitrification carriers, and safety wear including cryogenic gloves in four lengths and liquid nitrogen face shields.

Worth reading if you manage, procure for, or work in an IVF or reproductive medicine lab.

Full article here: Cryogenic Accessories, Storage Vessels & Lab Supplies for IVF

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