User:AsheimB

Contents

 * 1) Portable ultrasound machines
 * 2) History
 * 3) Uses
 * 4) References
 * 5) See also

Portable ultrasound machines
A medical imaging device that uses ultrasound for diagnostic purposes and is smaller and lighter than the console style ultrasound machines that preceded them. In most cases these mobile ultrasound systems could be carried by hand and in some cases even operated for a time on battery power alone. The first portable ultrasound machines arrived in the early 1980s but battery powered systems that could be easily carried did not arrive until the late 1990s.

History
The ADR 2130, designed by Marty Wilcox was the first portable ultrasound unit commercially available in the United States, being released in 1975. This unit weighed about 25 lbs, had 3 linear probes to choose from and used an oscilloscope for a display instead of a tv monitor.[1] ADR was later purchased by ATL which later spun off its portable technology into a company that became Sonosite. ATL was later purchased by Philips while Sonosite came out with its first battery powered portable offering, the Sonosite 180 released in 1999.[2] Previous to this, Diagnostic Ultrasound Corporation (now Verathon Inc.) introduced its first portable ultrasound device, the BladderScan bladder volume instrument in 1989. Verathon went on to innovate a series of enhanced portable ultrasound devices, including a BladderScan model that measures bladder volume in both adults and small children, a dual-function BladderScan device that provides both bladder volume and abdominal aortic measurement in one instrument, and an AortaScan aortic measurement instrument to help assess abdominal aortic aneurysm. Ecton produced a low-cost portable cardiac ultrasound system that could be carried by hand in March 1998,[3] but the test prototypes were never put into full scale production because of difficulty finding venture capital. Ecton was purchased by Acuson in 1999 with the purpose of keeping the Ecton product from coming to market, but was later released as the Acuson Cypress portable ultrasound system which was released in 2000.[4] The first battery powered portable was the Organon Teknika MiniVisor produced in 1979, but which saw only limited production. The first dual-touch screen portable the Hyperion ultrasound system distributed through Graydon Pierce Imaging is designed specifically for the most hostile and demanding medical environments – Military Medical Applications (MEDCOM), Emergency Medical Services, Trauma Centers and Humanitarian Relief Operations.

Uses
Portable ultrasound machines are typically used in situations where space is limited, mobility is important, or the scanning must be done in the field. OB/GYN doctors were the first to start using portable ultrasound systems as these could be brought bedside or were affordable enough to be purchased by a private practice. Currently portable ultrasound machines are used in Cardiac, Vascular, Radiology, Endocrinology, Pediatric, Urologic, and OB/GYN applications. In addition, EMS personnel from several countries including Germany, Italy, France, and the United States have used portable ultrasound evaluations in the field[5]