Johnson & Johnson MedTech, a global leader in cardiac arrhythmia treatment, today announced European CE mark approval of the Dual Energy THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter for the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias. The Dual Energy THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter is an irrigated, contact-force sensing catheter powered by the TRUPULSE™ Generator, and is fully integrated with the CARTO™ 3 System for electro-anatomical mapping and for tag indexing.1 The company expects TRUPULSE™ Generator hardware compatibility in the first half of 2025. When fully approved, the platform will provide electrophysiologists with the ability to switch between radiofrequency (RF) and pulsed field (PF) energy in the same catheter they know and trust. The Dual Energy THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter is not currently approved in the United States. The Dual Energy THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter is designed on the same platform as the radiofrequency THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter – the most commonly used catheter in the world today, with many years of physician experience.
Johnson & Johnson MedTech Announces CE Mark Approval for Dual Energy THERMOCOOL SMARTTOUCH™ SF Catheter
LabNews Media LLC
The Editors in Chief of labnews.ai are Marita Vollborn and Vlad Georgescu. They have been bestselling authors, science writers, and science journalists since 1994.More details about their writing at X-Press Journalistenbüro (https://xpress-journalisten.com).More Info on Wikipedia:About Marita: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marita_Vollborn About Vlad: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlad_Georgescu
Similar Posts
Precision gene editing clarifies role of a master gene in human embryo
Scientists at the University of Cambridge have used the base editing technique to modify a single gene in human embryos for the first time. The study shows the crucial role…
Step length as a marker for cognitive decline in dogs
Shorter forelimb stride length is associated with cognitive decline in older dogs. This is shown by a study from North Carolina State University. The results complement the…
New findings on liver regeneration after operations
Researchers at Michigan State University have refuted a long-standing scientific consensus on the role of the protein plasminogen in liver regeneration after operations. Lower plasminogen levels promoted in...
