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Small CT brain scanner fitted in ambulances or emergency aircraft could save lives of stroke patients
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EMVision launches portable scanner to diagnose brain trauma
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Image source: Getty Images
EMVision Medical Devices Ltd(ASX: EMV) shares were on the rise today following news of two significant technology and product development breakthroughs from the company.
By the market’s close, the EMVision share price was trading at $3.16, up 4.29% from yesterday’s closing price of $3.03.
Let’s take a closer look at the latest news from EMVision.
What’s driving the EMVision share price?
EMVision shares responded positively today after the company announced it has developed two new technologies. These will work alongside its prototype portable electromagnetic (EM) imaging device, currently being developed as a brain scanner.
Why is the EMvision (ASX:EMV) share price surging 12% this week?
Lucas Radbourne | April 16, 2021 3:49pm |
More on: Image source: Getty Images
EMvision Medical Devices Ltd (ASX: EMV) shares are rising today, adding to significant gains notched up this week. At the time of writing, the EMvision share price is trading 0.32% higher to $3.09. This puts the company’s gains this week at 11.96%.
EMvision is focused on the commercialisation of a portable medical device for stroke diagnosis and monitoring as well as other medical imaging needs.
It’s currently involved in the research and development of this medical imaging and diagnostic technology, which was previously licensed and subsequently acquired from
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Up, up and away: RMIT engineers part of team transforming urgent stroke care in air and on ground
RMIT University
RMIT researchers will build light, portable brain scanners into air and road ambulances as part of a project to revolutionise stroke care in Australia.
School of Engineering Professor Cees Bil and Associate Professor Kate Fox are part of a multi-organisation team recently awarded $40 million from the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Frontiers initiative.
The five-year, first of its kind, program is expected to dramatically reduce the risk of death and disability from stroke for many Australians, but particularly for those who live in rural or remote locations. It will build on the successful metropolitan mobile stroke ambulance, which has been serving Melburnians for three years.
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