Sinopharm - Syringe Infusion pump - SYS-50
Non Technical and Terms
- Initial Delivery Time - 2 to 4 weeks
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Pricing Incoterm - CIP
- Advance Payments - 40% upfront with a Bank guarantee, 60% on shipping
- Warranty - 12 months
- Manuals - Printed and digital user service manuals
- Shipping - Air, Land or Sea
Training
All Training and Manual materials will be available in English. Some materials will be available in French and Spanish. Where French and Spanish are needed and not available, the supplier will offer translation services in electronic copy. Training shall be available in English or Spanish or French and shall be available to users within two (2) weeks of equipment delivery.
China National Pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd. (Sinopharm) is a large healthcare group directly under the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) of the State Council, with 200,000 employees and a full chain in the industry covering R&D, manufacturing, logistics and distribution, retail chains, healthcare, engineering services, exhibitions and conferences, international business and financial services.
For further enquiries, please contact
Jade Zhang
China Sinopharm International Corporation - Medical Device Dept.
Address: Fortune Tower, No.4, Hui Xin Dongjie, Chao Yang District, Beijing 100029, China
Tel.: +86-10-8466 3076/ +86-13269815298
E-mail: zhangyingshi@sinopharm.com
Syringe infusion pumps are used to administer intravenous (IV) fluids such as antibiotics, regional anesthetics, antiarrhythmic medications, and chemotherapeutic agents. Syringe pumps ensure highly accurate volume delivery and consistent flow for small volumes of potent pharmacologic agents that are typically delivered at flow settings between 0.5 and 10 milliliter per hour (mL/hr) in increments of 0.1 or 1 mL/hr. The components of a syringe-pump system are a syringe, controls, an actuation mechanism (usually a lead screw with a pusher block), and a motor. Compatible syringes for each system vary in style and size. A pump expels fluid from the syringe by advancing either the plunger or the barrel at a set rate. In most syringe pumps, a motor drives a lead screw or gear mechanism. The speed of the motor varies with the set flow rate and the syringe size. Most pumps use a stepper motor that delivers a specific volume with each pulse; varying the infusion rate changes the frequency of the pulses. However, the flow rate is effectively the same as in units with continuously variable motors because the boluses from the stepper motor are frequent and small.
Syringe pumps have calibrated flow settings, typically indicated in mL/hr. Some pumps can be programmed in mL/min and units of mass (e.g., mg, μg), which can be linked to a patient's weight (in kg). For example, physicians often prescribe doses in units such as μg/kg/min. The syringe's diameter and the rate at which the plunger is advanced determine the rate of flow (the same motor speed will result in a higher flow rate with a larger-barrel syringe). Syringe infusion pumps also include safety and alarm features to avoid injuring the patient receiving treatment. Common alarm conditions include flow occlusion, loss of power, end of infusion, and no syringe loaded..