This is the face of men’s health in my life and life just wouldn’t be the same without them. Throughout November Miss Vivi will be supporting Movember Australia by being a Mo Sista and sporting a moustache on all our sites.
Movember is an annual charity initiative that sees the sprouting of moustaches on guys around the globe during November, in a united movement for men’s health.
Committing their top lip for 30 hairy days these men (known as Mo Bros), effectively become walking, talking billboards and through their Mo growing efforts, raise vital funds and awareness for prostate cancer, testicular cancer and mental health.
Thanks to the support of over one million Mo Bros and Mo Sistas across 21 countries, Movember is now recognised as one of the world’s leading non-government funders of research and care programs for men’s health issues.
One of my favourite things about conferences is catching up with the other suppliers and checking out all the cool new stuff they have for you. In Cairns in June the lovely lads from Scientrific gave me a sample of the Nalgene Super Versi-Dry Surface Protector with instructions to try it out as a dissection mat and report back.
The mat comes as a sheet or a roll and you can easily cut a piece to the size you need. It’s designed with all sorts of lab tasks in mind, it’s chemical resistant and absorbs spills.
The front of the mat is slightly fuzzy and the back has a waterproof coating to stop ‘yuck’ from soaking through on to the bench. I’m going to test it out on an eye dissection to see how it goes.
The slip resistant surface of the mat held on to the specimen nicely and stopped it from scooting out from under the scalpel blade. Porcine eyes aren’t very big so your fingers are quite close to the blade. The less slippage, the better. Once the eye was opened the mat soaked up the vitreous humour that spills out and usually makes your dissection tray a bit slippery.
I didn’t bother with a dissection board – I just used the mat directly on the table. You can see the back of the mat here hasn’t let any of the moisture leak through and hasn’t been cut by the normal use of the scalpel.
I tested a direct slice with the scalpel onto the mat and it did go straight through but that wouldn’t be a problem during a normal dissection. Pushing the scalpel straight down through the layers of the cornea onto the mat didn’t cut through it at all. You would probably use the mat on top of some sort of dissection board in the classroom anyway to avoid any damage to your benchtops.
At the end of the dissection your boards and benches should just need a quick spray and wipe down with some disinfectant unless someone has really gone to town with the scalpel on the mat. The mat can be cut to size and then the leftovers can be wrapped up in it and disposed of so there is very little wastage and it will help with tidy up at the end of the class.
All in all, I think this would be a valuable addition to the lab. Not only for dissections but for all sorts of experiments in the classroom as well as for jobs in the prep room. Don’t forget it is chemical resistant as well so it can be used to protect your benchtops from chemistry experiment spills and thrills. Next time you see Scientrific at a conference then ask to have a look at a sample.
The Nalgene Super Versi-Dry Surface Protector sample was supplied free of charge on the understanding that it would be honestly reviewed on this site without influencing the outcome of the review.
This photo has been doing the rounds of Pinterest recently captioned as “the heart of a blue whale”. I haven’t been able to find the original source of the photo or been able to confirm that it’s a heart from a whale. Regardless – it’s a big heart and an impressive photo and there are more of them here.
My point here is that it is obviously a photo taken in a lab of a heart that is going to be studied. It would not have been easy to get and it obviously wasn’t easy to maneuver into the lab. And what have they done? Chopped the top off it and made it almost completely useless as a teaching specimen.