Friday, July 31, 2009

All You Need to Know About Organ Transplants and EKG Machines (Part 15): A Schiller Brand Review

As for the fifteenth part of this new article series titled as All You Need to Know About Organ Transplants and EKG Machines, we will just continue on discussing about transplant Surgery and the hospital experience.

Recovering From Transplant Surgery

How long you can expect to stay in the hospital after your surgery depends on a number of factors -- how sick you were when you went in and how well the surgery went, to name two.

Typically, a liver patient is sent to the intensive care or critical care unit for a time, Abouljoud says. But kidney patients, for instance, don't routinely go to ICU, says Penelope Loughhead, LMSW, a transplant social worker at Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston, speaking of the routine at her facility.

You will be allowed visitors as soon as your doctor decides you are well enough, and that is often sooner than you might expect. Depending on how you're feeling, it may be even the same day as your surgery, says Diane Kasper, RN, heart transplant coordinator at Mayo Clinic Hospital in Phoenix.

The emphasis is on getting you up and active soon after transplant surgery. Heart transplant patients, Kasper says, are often sitting up in a chair within one or two days.

Length of stay in the hospital varies, too. For kidney transplants, it's often four or five days. For kidney and pancreas, it may be seven to 10 days. After liver transplants, patients are often kept seven to 10 days.

Allow me to stop there for a moment to give a review on this yet another superb EKG machine device brand called Schiller. Also being listed in the EKGShop.com website, Schiller is regarded as one of the recommended ECG Machines brand available in the market today as being used by most doctors and medical hospitals or clinics.

Enumerated below are its bestsellers products:

Schiller AT-2 Interpretive EKG - The AT-2 is a low cost ECG system with performance features previously only available in high priced systems. User selectable 6 or 12 channel printout on A4 size reports (8.5 x 11 inch) within seconds - at the touch of a button. Great for filing, faxing, or scanning. Optional is an automatic measurement and interpretation program as well as a trolley.

Schiller AT-10 Plus Interpretive and Memory EKG - The AT-10 plus combines the basics of electrocardiography with the benefits of the IT world. It not only provides all functions of a high-quality 12-channel electrocardiograph but also meets the requirements of an integrated diagnosis workstation. Its brilliant communication concept makes the AT-10 plus an extremely flexible tool.

Schiller AT-1 Interpretive EKG - This machine pays for itself after 30 tests. Fast and accurate analysis using Schiller's proven measurement and interpretation program. The Schiller AT-1 series is a great ECG EKG machine for the family physician, visiting nurse, nursing home and school training. 3 channel representation of all 12 simultaneously acquired leads.

Schiller AT-102 PC Interpretive and PFT ECG - This machine pays for itself after 105 tests. PC-based or standalone operation. SCHILLER filters technology. Interfaces for control of digital ergometers/treadmills. On-board data management. AT-104 networking allows you to review, edit, print and export stored final reports, keeping your stress system free for testing.

Schiller PC Based AT-110 Stress System with Cart and Treadmill - The new high-end CardioLaptop for Cardiologists. This device based on PC technology unifies all cardiological diagnostic features within a handy laptop format with simple one-key operation. Resting ECG recordings provide measurements, interpretation, average cycles and rhythm sections of all 12 leads. All leads and measurements can be printed out on the integrated high resolution thermal printer (or optionally on an external printer), in the format most convenient to the physician.

For more info regarding this brand, you may visit the link below:

http://www.ekgshop.com/Category/schiller-11.html

No comments:

Post a Comment