GI Archives

BrainLab’s Digital Lightbox Getting an Upgrade

Digital LightBox BrainLabs Digital Lightbox Getting an Upgrade
BrainLab AG is planning on releasing an updated version of its Digital Lightbox multitouch clinical display. Still reminding us of a giant iPhone, the unit interfaces with EMRs to display and manipulate clinical images easily and intuitively, essentially making the keyboard or any other interface device unnecessary.
Here’s what the company tells Medgadget about the new features in the latest release of the Digital Lightbox scheduled for this summer:

The new Video-input feature allows the integration of data on the Digital Lightbox, when it is located in the OR, from sources like micro-, endo- and arthroscopes; and video signals can be streamed from the OR and displayed on the Digital Lightbox when it is positioned in surgeons’ offices or meeting rooms. This feature extends the range of application into new medical subspecialties, strengthening the value of Digital Lightbox as a core multi-disciplinary platform for hospital information networks.
When version 1.0 came to the market, a number of customers wanted the Digital Lightbox in rooms dedicated for teaching, patient education, tumor boards and internal meetings. The new External Display-out feature makes it possible to connect the Digital Lightbox to one or more additional displays or projectors, in or outside the room. This makes it more versatile for use in situations when large groups of medical experts come together and the even the 30″ display of the Digital Lightbox isn’t big enough.
Digital Lightbox also serves as the viewing display and remote control for VectorVision flex, combining an image-guided surgery platform with large-scale viewing, and fast data access and manipulation.

Here’s a company video demonstrating the system:


Product page: Digital Lightbox
Flashback: Digital Lightbox Brings Minority Report to The OR (No Precognition Capabilities)

Cardinal’s Endura Scrubs for the Modern Clinician

Cardinal's Endura Scrubs for the Modern Clinician

Cardinal Health is releasing a new line of clinical scrubs that the company believes will make your life safer, easier, and more comfortable. The big deal about Cardinal’s Endura™ apparel line is the specialty fabric used, which is supposedly stronger and more breathable.
Some features from the product page:

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HemAway Toilet Seat Helps With Prolapsed Hemorrhoids

HemAway Toilet Seat Helps With Prolapsed Hemorrhoids

The HemAway® toilet seat was designed by a physician suffering from hemorrhoids who wanted a simple option to help retract the swollen tissue. By sitting down in the specialized seat and performing a few basic, carefully choreographed body movements, a patient supposedly can relieve the pain without applying ointment or having to reach back there at all. The product has FDA clearance and is now on sale direct from the manufacturer.
Here’s a thought provoking animation showing how one would use the seat:

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Cook Medical Introduces LoopTip Wire Guide for ERCPs

Cook Medical Introduces LoopTip Wire Guide for ERCPs

Cook Medical is releasing a new endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) wire guide for easier and less traumatic passage through the pancreatobiliary ductal system. With a newly designed closed distal loop, the Fusion LoopTip promises to avoid the nooks and crannies that can make passage difficult.
From a statement by Cook Medical:

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Third Eye Retroscope Wins FDA OK

Third Eye Retroscope Wins FDA OK

Traditional colonoscopes are forward looking devices that dwell in the mysterious realm of irregular shapes and deep caverns. Because folds within the cavity often prevent seeing around the bend, Avantis Medical Systems introduced the Third Eye Retroscope that we wrote about last October. The FDA just gave approval to the device that attaches to colonoscopes and acts like a rear view mirror, helping to avoid missed polyps.
Features and benefits of the device from the product page:

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Gaseous pH Monitoring in Airway Gets EU Marketing Clearance

Gaseous pH Monitoring in Airway Gets EU Marketing Clearance

Restech (Respiratory Technology Corporation) out of San Diego, California has won European approval to market the firm’s Dx-pH Measurement System™. The device is intended to measure pH levels in the airway and provide guidance to the physician about overall pharyngeal acid exposure. We’ve covered this system before, as our flashbacks below testify.
From a press release obtained by Medgadget:

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Amimon’s High Definition Wireless Video Goes Clinical

Amimon's High Definition Wireless Video Goes Clinical

Stryker Endoscopy is launching a wireless high definition monitor for the clinical world. Utilizing wireless technology from Israel’s Amimon Inc., the monitor can receive signals up to 1080i, which means uncompromising quality in OR imaging with fewer tangled cables getting in the way.

AMIMON has granted Stryker Endoscopy exclusive access to AMIMON’s technology for the medical endoscopy market.

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Scientists Probe New Technology to Detect Cancer in Barrett’s

Scientists Probe New Technology to Detect Cancer in Barrett's

A new study in the US and Germany has begun to assess the viability of using a miniature endoscopic camera from Mauna Kea Technologies, a Paris, France company, to diagnose whether Barrett’s esophagitis has progressed to a dysplastic or neoplastic state. We have reported about the Cellvizio® fibered confocal microscopy system, that allows a practitioner to insert one of the miniprobes (only 300 um to 2.8 mm in diameter) into a conventional endoscope and record microscopic level movies of the tissue, on number of occasions before: see our flashbacks below.
From the latest press release by the company:

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iPill for Electronic Drug Delivery

iPill for Electronic Drug Delivery

Last November we covered Philips‘ application for a patent that described an electronic swallowable capsule that would deliver drugs close to where they would be most effective, or best absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract. Now Philips is introducing the iPill, a prototype device that features a pump to release a drug, a radio to communicate with the ex vivo world, an on board computer, and a battery to power it all.
Philips promises to show off the device in Atlanta at the annual meeting of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists this month.

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