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Published in: Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics 10/2013

01-10-2013 | Technological Innovations

The heat is on: room temperature affects laboratory equipment–an observational study

Authors: Julia M. Butler, Jane E. Johnson, William R. Boone

Published in: Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics | Issue 10/2013

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Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the effect of ambient room temperature on equipment typically used in in vitro fertilization (IVF).

Design

We set the control temperature of the room to 20 °C (+/−0.3) and used CIMScan probes to record temperatures of the following equipment: six microscope heating stages, four incubators, five slide warmers and three heating blocks. We then increased the room temperature to 26 °C (+/−0.3) or decreased it to 17 °C (+/−0.3) and monitored the same equipment again. We wanted to determine what role, if any, changing room temperature has on equipment temperature fluctuation.

Results

There was a direct relationship between room temperature and equipment temperature stability. When room temperature increased or decreased, equipment temperature reacted in a corresponding manner. Statistical differences between equipment were found when the room temperature changed. What is also noteworthy is that temperature of equipment responded within 5 min to a change in room temperature.

Conclusions

Clearly, it is necessary to be aware of the affect of room temperature on equipment when performing assisted reproductive procedures. Room and equipment temperatures should be monitored faithfully and adjusted as frequently as needed, so that consistent culture conditions can be maintained. If more stringent temperature control can be achieved, human assisted reproduction success rates may improve.
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Metadata
Title
The heat is on: room temperature affects laboratory equipment–an observational study
Authors
Julia M. Butler
Jane E. Johnson
William R. Boone
Publication date
01-10-2013
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics / Issue 10/2013
Print ISSN: 1058-0468
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7330
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10815-013-0064-4

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