Piavita Continue Collaboration Efforts to Enhance Critical Care

Piavita System fitted to an inpatient in intensive care

Piavita Collaborate with Oakham Veterinary Hospital to Enhance Critical Care

Piavita AG, the unique solution that simplifies and monitors horse’s vital signs, have announced an exciting collaboration with Dr. Adam Redpath of the University of Nottingham and Oakham Veterinary Hospital. The new and exciting collaboration will work to enhance the post-operative monitoring of horses in the hospital’s newly equipped Critical Care Unit.

About Piavita AG

The Piavet system provides real-time cloud-based access to vital signs of inpatients using a small, robust device attached without the need any wires or additional electrodes. The devices will be to monitor heart rate, respiratory rate and core body temperature for horses within the hospital from any location.

Dr. Med. Vet. A. Redpath commented:

Continuous monitoring of vital parameters enables us to provide the highest standards of clinical care to animals at greatest risk of developing complications such as sepsis and SIRS, paralleling standards of patient monitoring that would be provided to human patients in high dependency hospital care. The lack of wires means the unit can be rapidly fitted and does not rely on the placement of electrodes, which may become detached, especially in horses with colic. As part of our ongoing research into assessment and management of acute and chronic pain in the peri-operative period, these devices will allow us to measure the impact of analgesic medications on changes in cardiac autonomic tone using heart rate variability analysis”.

Image: online monitoring using Piavet of equine inpatient with SIRS secondary to colitis with an increased heart (HR/ECG) and respiratory (RESP) rates alongside a normal core temperature (BCT).  in a horse recently hospitalised with sepsis resulting from severe diarrhoea.
Image: online monitoring using Piavet of equine inpatient with SIRS secondary to colitis with an increased heart (HR/ECG) and respiratory (RESP) rates alongside a normal core temperature (BCT). in a horse recently hospitalised with sepsis resulting from severe diarrhoea.

The monitor, which is fitted to a surcingle type belt, enables wireless transmission of medical information, vital for recordings and monitoring of patients wellbeing during the recovery process.

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The system, which has been developed by a Swiss-based company, was only released into the UK market during 2018. For more information visit www.piavita.com.

 

 

 

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