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NYU Medical Center Gets to the Heart of HD Technology with Sony

April 20, 2005
Park Ridge, NJ - Dr. Stephen Colvin is on the cutting edge in more ways than one. As chief of cardiothoracic surgery at the New York University (NYU) School of Medicine, he has pioneered methods of minimally invasive cardiac surgery that are now used by hospitals worldwide.

He has also helped to introduce the use of high-definition video technology to enhance distance learning, teleconferencing and lecture methods. And at the heart of it all is an array of Sony HD cameras, monitors and videoconferencing products.

"The imaging and display products we have are very beneficial for several applications, including use as a teaching tool so the fellows, residents and visiting physicians who come here to learn can view our procedures in the best quality image," said Colvin."

Colvin and his team have found that HD video is an ideal way of visualizing the heart, as well as for designing life-like 3-D animations of a beating heart to use in training.

"The clarity is so much better," Colvin said. "It gives us the higher resolution needed to better delineate between tissue and fat, for example. Everything is much clearer: the precision, the accuracy, how beautiful things are, how much more realistic everything looks. The 3-D effects are also really powerful."

The improved color definition enabled by the Sony HD monitors is extremely helpful. For example, "true" red is often very difficult to capture on video, but the Sony monitors flatten them to make accurate reproduction easier.

"Before, we'd have to spend more time playing with lighting and moving things around just to get a good picture," Colvin said.

Three operating rooms within the NYU Medical Center are fully HD-enabled and also connected by Sony videoconferencing products. Colvin has a Sony PCS-TL50 desktop conferencing system in his office, so he can view procedures in progress from his desk, or display them during boardroom presentations.

"I can even watch the preparations being done for surgery, so I know when the team is ready for me to come down to the operating room," Colvin said.

Colvin and his team have been exploring the integration of HD video and cardiac surgery for several years.

In the mid '90s, a live HD transmission of a procedure being done at NYU was up-linked to a surgical convention in New Orleans, according to Allan Katz, president of VTS Medical, the systems integrator that managed the equipment installations at NYU.

Katz added that NYU is also linked to other New York area hospitals through the PCS-TL50 system, for sharing footage of procedures and for distance learning.

Sony imaging, display and videoconferencing products at NYU include:

O.R. #1:

* 1 HDC-X300K HD Camera
* 2 FWD32LX1/S 32-inch LCD High Definition Displays
* 1 FWD42LX1/S 42-inch LCD High Definition Display
* 2 SDM-S93B Flat-panel 19-inch VGA Display
* 1 BRC-300 Remote Camera
* 1 PCS-G70N Conferencing System with Camera


O.R. #2:

* 1 HDC-X300K High Definition Camera
* 1 HDW-M2000TIN HD VTR
* 2 FWD32LX1/S 32-inch LCD High Definition Displays
* 1 FWD42LX1/S 42-inch LCD High Definition Displays
* 2 SDM-S93B Flat-panel 19-inch VGA Displays
* 1 BRC-300 Remote Camera
* 1 PCS-G70N Conferencing System with Camera


O.R. #17:

* 1 Existing Sony H-10 High Definition Camera
* 2 FWD32LX1/S 32-inch LCD High Definition Displays
* 1 FWD42LX1/S 42-inch LCD High Definition Display
* 2 SDM-S93B Flat-panel 19-inch VGA Displays
* 1 BRC-300 Remote Camera 1 PCS-G70N Conferencing System with Camera


Guest Viewing Area (outside O.R.s 1 and 2)

* 2 FWD32LX1/S 32-inch LCD High Definition Displays
* Video Editing Suite (currently under renovation)
* 1 HDW-M2000TIN High Definition VTR


Conference Room

* 1 FWD-50PX1 50-inch Plasma High Definition Display
* 1 BRC-300 Remote Camera
* 1 PCS-G70N Conferencing System with Camera


Dr. Colvin's Office

* 1 PCS-TL50 Desktop Videoconferencing System

 

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