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MIS-VET Installs Samsung RS85 Prestige at the Royal Veterinary College, QMHA

MIS Healthcare

Left to right: Ash Moors, Ana Bach, Cesar Llanos, Francisco Llabres-Diaz, Andrea Vila, Carli Bentley, Elizabetta Giorgio, Coleen Jones, Hennie Garshoel 


 

Following a comprehensive and compliant tender process for the provision of an Ultrasound System for the Royal Veterinary College (RVC) radiology department at the Queen Mother Hospital for Animals (QMHA). With the aim of obtaining best value for money, maximising flexibility, increasing sustainability and improving efficiencies and controls through the adoption of technological changes within the industry, MIS Healthcare is proud to announce the installation of the Samsung RS85 Prestige Vet at the QMHA. As one of the largest and most advanced veterinary hospitals globally, QMHA is the base for RVC Small Animal Referrals. 

 

The Samsung RS85 Prestige, renowned for its cutting-edge diagnostic capabilities, is powered by Samsung’s pioneering imaging engine, Crystal Architecture™. The RS85 Prestige Vet boasts a variety of advanced features, such as LumiFlow™, which visualises blood flow in three dimensions to help understand the structure of blood flow and small vessels intuitively.  

 

Francisco Llabres-Diaz, RVC’s Senior Lecturer in Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging commented: 

 

“The QMHA has very recently accepted the delivery of a RS85 Prestige Samsung high end ultrasound machine, supplied by MIS Healthcare, and the new system, a major upgrade from our previous ultrasound system, has already made a significant impact on the clinic floor. It has been fantastic to see how the progression in computing and digital technology that has taken place in the industry in the last few years, together with upgrades in hardware, has translated into a machine consistently producing images of excellent quality. The purchase of four different transducers of different footprints, some of them scanning at very high frequencies, makes the system a joy to use. The system is also very versatile, which allows multiple users to easily feel comfortable with the different settings. This is of outmost importance as the current diagnostic imaging team comprises several faculty members, including multiple experienced radiologists that locum for us on a regular basis, as well as five small animal residents and an imaging specific intern. Everybody has their own very particular personal preferences when scanning, but the system can easily cope with that, always producing outstanding images.  

 

The diagnostic imaging team is very much looking forward to working with the new system for years to come. The system will be extremely helpful in teaching the next generation of veterinary radiologists and it is also hoped that it will help in taking veterinary medicine forward through producing and collaborating in interesting clinical research. For instance, the oncology team has already implemented the use of contrast enhanced ultrasound for lymph node mapping in cases of mast cell tumours, to great clinical advantage.” 

 

 

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