Philips 866185 User Manual Product Brochure Expression MR400 MR Patient Monitor 7fd3dfac9c444d8e911fa77c01483b4b

866185 Product brochure Philips%20Expression%20MR400%20Brochure Expression MR400 MR Patient Monitor866185

User Manual: Philips 866185 Product Brochure Philips Expression MR400 MR Patient Monitor Philips - Expression MR400 MR Patient Monitor866185

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MR Patient Care
MR400
Expression
Ready for
what’s next
MR Patient Care
MR400
Expression
Its a
new day
Healthcare is changing. You’re asking more of your
MR stabecause you have toand now you can
ask more of your MR patient monitoring, too.
Expression MR400 helps you do what’s best for
your patients in the face of evolving care models
by elevating your monitoring capabilities from
MR-level to bedside-level.
Create the kind of experiences for patients and
sta that help drive market preference for your
services while you capture the clinical and economic
opportunities required for competitive success
into the future.
Expression MR400 is our most advanced system
ever for MR patient monitoring. It’s the natural
solution for those who ask, “What’s next?
In a perfect world there would be no dierence between MR
and bedside patient monitors.
Expression MR400 takes a bold step toward that ideal so that you can manage
your MR patients with a high level of decision-making condence.
Bedside-quality parameters
with timesaving snap-and-go
connections come to MR
monitoring of SpO2, IBP, NIBP,
and CO2 (SINC).
Alarm “ags” redene
pre-emptive intelligence
with a unique multi-priority
system for technical and
clinical alarming, including
bedside-type warnings for
desaturation, apnea and extreme
brady/tachycardia. One-touch
calculation lets you tailor
alarms by individual patient.
Philips-designed 15" LED
widescreen combines vital
signs at high resolution with the
familiarity of a bedside interface.
An exclusive combination of ECG
advances from the patient to the
waveform puts you further ahead
in providing care in the MR suite.
Bedside thinking
comes to MR
What’s next?
The growing value of MRI as a diagnostic tool means elements of the ICU
and OR are increasingly making their way to the MR suite.
Ask your MR monitoring partner, “What are you doing to help increase
commonality among patient monitoring systems across departments,
and making it easier to connect with hospital IT systems?”
*Option via Expression Information Portal
Spend less time charting, more time with patients. Streamline admission
and discharge with automated case management, wireless barcode
scanning, and easy connectivity with your hospital IT systems.*
What you should know about cardiac monitoring in the MR suite
Rapid switching of magnetic eld gradients and RF pulsing can induce signicant artifacts in acquired
ECG signals.1 ECG monitoring can also interfere with electromagnetic elds, resulting in ECG artifacts
that can imitate abnormalities on the MR image.2
Philips engineers address the ECG issue with a proprietary blend of electrodes, signal technology, and
upgradeable software in an advanced cardiac solution to meet the unique demands of the MR suite.
Expression MR400 features switchable ECG ltering tailored for dierent sequences and locations
in your suite and specic operation modes for adults, pediatrics, and neonates.
Accessories that t properly
can make all the dierence in
creating a pleasant experience—
and optimal results—for both
patients and sta.
Make the most
of the MR experience
The comprehensive Expression patient care solution is designed
for simplied workow, patient comfort, and less cable clutter.
With one wireless connection to the patient you can share
information from transport to monitoring, cardiac gating, and
electronic patient record systems.
Improve patient care and workow with the exibility to monitor patients even when optimizing protocols
up to 4W/kg SAR and 7.2µT B1rms. Create a comfortable working environment by reducing restrictions that
normally accompany monitor placement relative to the patient and magnet.
What’s next?
For a host of reasons, patients and their families are becoming more
invested in their care choices.
Ask your MR monitoring partner, “How can you help me create preference
for my site’s MR services among these new decision-makers?”
5,000
Gauss
4
W/kg
SAR 7.2
µT
B1rms 3.0T
Instrument ight rules
Some clinicians have compared the experience of monitoring anesthetized
patients in the MR suite to ying in the darkness: in both cases you have
to trust your instruments because visibility is limited.
Empowering you with capabilities commonly found in OR monitors can
help you y with more condence.
Its why we created the Expression MR400 to provide you with automatic
identication of dual anesthetic agents, monitoring of body and surface
temperatures, MAC values, trends, and perfusion index.
Choose a monitor that can take you where you want to go.
Expression MR400 provides a comprehensive approach to MR patient
monitoring that empowers you through exibility in exam protocols, freedom
of movement, and automated intelligence to support you by turning raw
information into actionable knowledge.
What’s next?
Population management models may present opportunities to reduce
hospital stays for sites that can perform new types of MR procedures.
Ask your MR monitoring partner,How can you help me elevate
the performance of my MR suite to take advantage of new procedures
as they evolve?”
New opportunities bring
new rewards
Perform the complex procedures that potentially get your patients home sooner.
Expression MR400 can put you in touch with the new clinical and economic opportunities
of value-based care as MR plays an increasingly important role in the larger patient care
continuum. Entirely new hardware and upgradeable software platforms are designed
to keep you at the forefront over time.
High-quality monitoring of anesthetic agents
and body temperature over long time periods
is crucial to conducting intra-operative
MR procedures.
Obtaining readings while the monitor is close
to the magnet and patient is critical for
successful functional MR procedures requiring
patient command activities.
Advanced cardiac architecture provides the
ECG signal and wireless gating capabilities
necessary for condent monitoring during more
complex procedures, especially with seniors.
How much sooner do I have
the ability to treat a patient
and get them back home?
Administrative Director, Radiology
Academic hospital, Eastern U.S.
Trends in MR procedures
New care models are signaling reductions
in MR imaging volume, with sicker patients
and more time-consuming sedation exams.
How are we helping you meet this challenge?
One monitor lets you use precious assets
fully by monitoring patients across your
range of procedures, from neonate and
pediatric to critical care, cardiac, the elderly,
and those requiring anesthesia.
These images were created using an MR system.
Trusted by the best
Every one of the top 10 childrens
hospitals in the U.S.* uses Expression
MR patient monitoring solutions
to help advance patient care.
*U.S. News and World Report, 2014
No other MR monitoring company can point to progress like this for you and your patients.
What’s next?
New care models are redening relationships between healthcare
providers and their partners.
Ask your MR monitoring partner,What resources can you bring
me to help manage patients through the entire care continuum?”
Every Expression MR400 monitor
is backed by the experience and
expertise of our Philips team.
Together, we
move forward
Our milestones
Your advances
First to market
with MR patient
monitoring system
Digital
gradient lters
Surface
temperature
parameter
Table-mounted
MR patient monitor
5,000 Gauss
rating
1987
1998
2004
2006
2008
2010
2011
2012
2014
2015
Pioneered
development of
rst MR patient
monitor
1980s
Wireless
remote display
Anesthetic
agent detection
Wireless
vital signs
12" color display
4W/kg
SAR rating
Unrestricted
Gauss rating
Color
touchscreen
display
ECO-friendly
green design
Multi-optional IT
connectivity system
(HL7 and Serial data)
Wireless
barcode scanner Gauss alarm
19" color
touchscreen display
Bedside/
OR NIBP, CO2/
respiration
Clinical
decision support
Body temperature
Bedside/OR SpO2
Perfusion and diusion
ECG digital gradient lters
360º alarm light
Comprehensive range
of disposable accessories
Modular
service design
Anesthesia-
mount monitor
Wireless gating
Alarm ags
ECG 3.0
7.2µT B1rms
Bedside/OR SpO2,
IBP, NIBP, CO2 (SINC)
Advanced
clinical alarms
5,000 Gauss
power supply
15" LED
touchscreen display
Growth and adoption of MR as routine imaging modality. Real time
imaging of the heart, functional MR of brain introduced.
Intraoperative procedures come to MR. ASA issues
practice advisory for use of anesthesia during MR studies.
Growth of ICU and NICU patient imaging in MR suite. Regulatory and
economic drivers incent global adoption of electronic health records.
Introduction of value-
based care models.
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Drawing on the best minds has never been more important
than it is today.
Its why we’re bringing the resources of our entire company to go beyond
technology and help you manage patient populations throughout the care
continuum. Take a look at where we have been and envision where we are
going together. Because it’s a new day. For you and for us.
© 2015 Koninklijke Philips N.V. All rights reserved. Specications are
subject to change without notice. Philips Healthcare reserves the
right to make changes in specications and/or to discontinue any
product at any time without notice or obligation and will not be liable
for any consequences resulting from the use of this publication.
Philips Healthcare is part of Royal Philips Electronics
www.philips.com/healthcare
healthcare@philips.com
www.ExpressionMR.com
www.invivocorp.com
HOW TO REACH US
Phone number: U.S.: (877) 468-4861
E-mail: Worldwide: Expression.info@philips.com
Model number: MR400
Part number: 866185
1
Larson, A. C., White, R. D., Laub, G., McVeigh, E. R., Li, D. and
Simonetti, O. P. (2004), Self-gated cardiac cine MRI. Magn
Reson Med, 51: 93–102. doi: 10.1002/mrm.10664.
2
Birkholz, Torsten MD; Schmid, Markus MD; Nimsky, Christopher
MD; Schüttler, Jürgen MD; Schmitz, Bernd MD; ECG Artifacts
During Intraoperative High-Field MRI Scanning; Journal
of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology: October 2004 – Volume 16 –
Issue 4 - pp 271-276.

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