ICU

Keep Vulnerable ICU Patients Safe

Decrease risk, increase diagnostic speed, and reduce transport-related incidents and infections with mobile CT bedside imaging.

NeuroLogica Logo

samsung-mct-icu-header

ICU Mobile CT Imaging

OmniTom® Elite or OmniTom® Elite with PCD mobile CT bedside imaging solutions can increase the safety and effectiveness of your ICU. The ability to image patients at the point-of-care in the ICU can facilitate rapid clinical decision-making and reduce the risks associated with transport.

Samsung mCT ICU OmniTom Elite

OmniTom® Elite

The NeuroLogica OmniTom Elite is a 16-slice mobile CT scanner that delivers high-quality imaging directly at the point of care, helping reduce the risks and delays of transporting critically ill patients to a traditional CT suite.

With advanced mobility, SmartAlign automatic positioning, high-resolution imaging, and dose management technologies, it is designed to improve workflow efficiency, patient safety, and diagnostic confidence across ICU, ER, OR, pediatric, and mobile stroke care settings. 

Samsung mCT ICU Omnitom with PCD

OmniTom® Elite with PCD

The NeuroLogica OmniTom Elite with PCD is an advanced mobile photon-counting CT scanner that delivers ultra-high-resolution imaging directly at the point of care, enabling faster and more confident clinical decisions without transporting critically ill patients to a traditional CT suite.

Its innovative Photon Counting Detector (PCD) technology directly measures individual x-ray photons to provide exceptional spatial resolution, spectral imaging capabilities, improved contrast-to-noise ratio, and enhanced material differentiation compared to conventional energy integrating detector (EID) CT systems. 


Reduce Transport Related Incidents and Infections1

Samsung mCT ICU omnitom stats 01

 


Nursing staff maintained in the ICU for continued focus on all patients2

Samsung mCT ICU omnitom stats 02
Achieve increased throughput in Radiology Department CT.-Associated Events

Samsung mCT ICU omnitom stats 03
Cost increase to hospital for inpatient vs outpatient imaging

(1) Halperin, John J., Stephen Moran, Doriann Prasek, Ann Richards, Charlene Ruggiero, and Christina Maund. “Reducing Hospital-Acquired Infections Among the Neurologically Critically Ill.” Neurocritical Care, 2016, 1–8. doi:10.1007/s12028-016-0286-2
(2) Anzai, Y., Heilbrun, M. E., Haas, D., Boi, L., Moshåre, K., Minoshima, S., Kaplan, R., & Lee, V. S. (2017). Dissecting Costs of CT Study: Application of TDABC (Time-driven Activity-based Costing) in a Tertiary Academic Center. Academic Radiology, 24(2), 200–208. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2016.11.001.

Request More Info or Schedule a Demo