06 July 2011

3M/LITTMANN ELECTRONIC STETHOSCOPE with ZARGIS CARDIOSCAN.

3M/Littmann Electronic Stethoscope Model 3200 With Zargis Cardioscan

The scope that never misses a beat

Health 2 of 12
3M Health Care Littmann Electronic Stethoscope Dan Saelinger
The stethoscope is older than the x-ray, the ballpoint pen, Popular Science and pretty much everything else in your doctor’s office. Now, 190 years after its invention, the go-to diagnostic tool hanging around every doc’s neck has earned a modern makeover. The sound-amplifying 3M Littmann Electronic Stethoscope 3200 listens to a patient’s heartbeat—lub-DUB, lub-DUB—and beams the beats to Cardioscan software that detects abnormalities.
Even top physicians have trouble discerning the swishing sounds that result from irregular surges of blood after the lub from the ones that follow the DUB. Called murmurs, the former are harmless, but the latter can indicate ailments such as congenital heart defects, holes in the heart wall, and constricted or leaky heart valves that interrupt blood flow. If the heartbeat sounds remotely atypical, many doctors prescribe a conclusive, and expensive, echocardiogram test.
3M’s stethoscope eliminates that guesswork. It transmits heart sounds to a doctor’s PC by Bluetooth, and Cardioscan renders a near real-time graphical representation of the sounds onscreen. The software then analyzes the sound waves and highlights minute abnormalities that signal harmful murmurs. The doctor can play the sound back at half speed to diagnose a problem more confidently, save the file to the patient’s chart, and e-mail it all to a cardiologist to confirm the diagnosis. Early tests of the system suggest that it could eliminate more than eight million unnecessary echocardiograms and cardiologist visits a year, saving some $9.4 billion and, even better, catch more of the dangerous murmurs. For doctors, and anyone with a heart, this stethoscope’s upgrades are well worth the two-century-long wait.
From $765; littmann.com, zargis.com

Australia:Gnathostomiasis

The SUN:UK from Australian Medical Journal

Pair eaten by worms

Deadly ... gnathostomiasis larvae
Deadly ... gnathostomiasis larvae
The 52-year-old man and his wife, 50, became infected after eating fish carrying potentially deadly gnathostomiasis larvae.
They had pan-fried the meal over a campfire, but the 1mm to 3mm worms survived near Derby, Western Australia.
The larvae can travel into the brain, other organs and spinal cord.
The horror marked the first time humans had been infected by the parasite in Australia, the country's Medical Journal said.
The couple survived.


Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3680426/Pair-eaten-by-worms.html#ixzz1RK1xjqy0