Royal Philips is integrating AI in its cardiac ultrasound devices and across cardiac care to help improve clinical confidence and increase efficiency. The portable Philips Ultrasound Compact System 5500 CV includes an AI-powered automation tool (the automated strain quantification) to assess the function of the heart’s left ventricle, a key indicator of heart health.
“The demands on cardiology departments have never been higher, driving clinicians to balance the delivery of high-quality care for a growing volume of complex patients with pressures to improve departmental efficiency,” says Bert van Meurs, executive vice president and chief business leader of image guided therapy and precision diagnosis at Philips.
“From helping sonographers acquire the right image and analyze it in the right way, to cutting the assessment time for cardiac MR and CT images, we’re integrating AI across our portfolio to help clinicians make sense of all the information available to them so that they can focus more on caring for their patients,” Meurs says.
AI in Cardiac Ultrasound
Ultrasound is one of the most used imaging modalities as the first line of diagnosis for cardiac patients. A shortage of operators dealing with heavy workloads and growing numbers of complex cases continues to challenge health systems across the globe.
Using AI to help streamline workflows and enhance diagnostic confidence is core to Philips cardiac ultrasound technology. Each year, Philips’ ultrasound systems support the diagnosis and treatment of more than 240 million patients.
Philips has been a leader in integrating AI-powered technology across its cardiac ultrasound portfolio, including full 3D quantification and modeling of the heart, automated 2D Doppler and length measurements, reproducible 2D strain quantification and dynamic analysis of the mitral valve. The company is now integrating AI-powered automated analysis and reporting.
AI Across Cardiac Care
Individually, Philips’ solutions can help solve cardiology’s daily challenges. Together, they create a powerful ecosystem that helps clinicians realize better cardiac care with greater efficiency. At the ESC Congress, Philips highlighted its Advanced Visualization Workspace, which integrates AI-enabled algorithms and workflows into a single workspace. The integration of cardiac MR and CT on Philips Advanced Visualization Workspace has lowered overall analysis time by 20-30 percent, according to Dr. Gaby Weissman, MD, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC.
Philips monitors 1.2 million patients every year, with 4 billion heartbeat data transmissions daily. Philips cardiology management solutions include remote cardiac monitoring innovations from Philips ECG Solutions, an AI-powered remote ambulatory cardiac monitoring provider, to better manage heart patients by extending physicians’ diagnostics and cardiac monitoring from home to hospital — and hospital to home.
Headquartered in the Netherlands, the company specializes in diagnostic imaging, ultrasound, image-guided therapy, monitoring and enterprise informatics, as well as in personal health. Philips generated 2022 sales of EUR 17.8 billion and employs approximately 71,500 employees with sales and services in more than 100 countries.
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