SYRACUSE — Upstate University Hospital is equipping its emergency departments (ED) with new portable machines that will allow staff to “better diagnose and treat patients.” The new MindRay TE X portable ultrasound machines feature better images, the ability to make calculations health-care professionals previously had to do manually, an interface with patient records in EPIC, […]
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SYRACUSE — Upstate University Hospital is equipping its emergency departments (ED) with new portable machines that will allow staff to “better diagnose and treat patients.” The new MindRay TE X portable ultrasound machines feature better images, the ability to make calculations health-care professionals previously had to do manually, an interface with patient records in EPIC, and an artificial-intelligence component used strictly for educational purposes, Upstate Medical University said in its online announcement. The downtown ED has two new machines, and “plans are in the works” for Upstate Community Hospital and the pediatric EDs to get new ones as well, Upstate Medical noted. Dr. Matthew Camara, assistant professor of emergency medicine (EM), said previous machines used in the downtown, Community, and pediatric emergency departments are “out of date.” “We wanted to have machines that not only the residents and faculty could use to perform bedside ultrasound but that had the functionality and the capabilities to really bring point of care ultrasound to the next level,” said Camara, who is also the assistant residency program director of emergency medicine. Portable ultrasound machines have been a “mainstay” in the emergency department for more than 30 years, Upstate Medical said. They were first used on trauma patients, but since then, their usage has expanded to help diagnose everything from an injured tendon to abdominal pain to shortness of breath. Now, they’re in use round-the-clock, on average 20 times in a 24-hour period, Canara said. As the technology has evolved, so too has the use of the machines. “Anyone with chest pain, anyone with shortness of breath, anyone that has concern for a kidney stone, gallstone, those are all bedside ultrasounds,” he said. “Abdominal pain from kidney stones, pneumonia, congestive heart failure, cellulitis, are all diagnosis that can be made with ultrasound to name a few. We use the ultrasounds during procedures to increase patient safety and decrease the risk of complications.”