Endoscopy Cart With 3 Trays Mobile Endoscope Storage & Procedure Trolley
Endoscopy Cart Advantages:
- Exceptional Storage Capacity: The standout feature is the three trays, providing significantly more space for organizing and storing a wider array of endoscopes, light sources, video processors, monitors, and various instruments and accessories. This increased capacity is crucial for complex procedures or busy units.
- Enhanced Workflow & Organization: With multiple distinct levels, the cart allows for superior organization, keeping all necessary equipment neatly separated and easily accessible. This streamlines the setup and breakdown process for endoscopy procedures, improving efficiency and reducing the risk of cross-contamination.
- Highly Mobile & Maneuverable: As a mobile trolley, it's designed for effortless transport. Smooth-gliding casters enable staff to easily move the entire setup between procedure rooms, patient areas, or storage, offering maximum flexibility and optimizing room utilization.
Endoscopy Cart Specification:
Size | 800*510*815mm |
The inner size of the tray | 500*345*90mm |
the height of the cover | 45mm |
Cators | 4 silent wheels with cross brakes |
Layer | 3 layers |
Endoscopy Cart Features:
Configuration: car body, universal wheel, two-layer tray, PMMA transparent cover, handle
1. The material of the turnover box of the endoscope transfer vehicle is also made of independent molds made of polymer composite material for manufacturing the cleaning tank table.
2. The car body is made of stainless steel sprayed plastic, which has the advantages of corrosion resistance, no water, smooth driving, convenient access and so on
The multi-layer design allows customers to mark clean and contaminated endoscopes in layers and place them during use, which can achieve efficient turnover and avoid cross-infection.
3. The pallet is separated from the car body and can be removed for use
4. Bottom: universal silent wheel, easy to push and pull, no inclusions, with wheel brake;
Where Endoscopy Carts Are Used
- Endoscopy Units/Suites: This is their primary location, serving as a dedicated workstation during procedures like colonoscopies, gastroscopies, and bronchoscopies. They hold endoscopes, light sources, video processors, monitors, and other necessary accessories.
- Operating Rooms (ORs): For surgical procedures that involve endoscopy, such as laparoscopic surgeries or minimally invasive interventions.
- Intensive Care Units (ICUs): Often used for bedside endoscopy procedures for critically ill patients who cannot be easily transported to a dedicated endoscopy suite.
- Emergency Rooms (ERs): For urgent diagnostic or therapeutic endoscopic procedures, such as addressing acute gastrointestinal bleeding or foreign body removal.
- Outpatient Clinics & Ambulatory Surgery Centers: In settings where a high volume of less complex endoscopic procedures are performed.
- Sterile Processing Departments (SPD): For transporting endoscopes to and from decontamination and reprocessing areas, often with features designed to prevent cross-contamination.
- Veterinary Clinics: For endoscopy procedures performed on animals.
