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Not the Retiring Type - January 2015 - Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Sharrock. "This is where gener- ator size comes into play. If your particular specialty is lim- ited to extremities, it may not be necessary to spend more on a bigger generator. If you oper- ate in a field like bariatrics, it will be worth your while to investigate the more powerful end of the spectrum." Then there's digital vs. ana- log. When it comes to image quality, analog just can't com- pete with digital or flat-panel technology, says Mr. Sharrock. Only analog C-arms have image intensifiers (IIs), pretty expen- sive parts that eventually lose image gain. IIs are readily avail- able on the second-hand market, both "certified used" and "refur- bished." A digital detector system, on the other hand, has no II. Instead, says Mr. Sharrock, these units are equipped with flat-panel digital detectors that exhibit very limited degradation and over a much longer period of use. Another drawback to having an II is the need to collimate down when viewing anatomy in a higher magnification. "While finer details become visible, the field of vision is reduced further and further with each subsequent magnification," says Mr. Sharrock, "whereas magnifi- cation on a digital system is possible without any reduction of scale." Flat-panel detectors are steadily replacing image intensifiers on 7 6 O U T PAT I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E O N L I N E | January 2015 C-arms should be able to expose any patient at every angle.

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