The Radlink Galileo Positioning System™ (GPS) provides surgeons with real-time feedback on orthopedic implant component positioning. Together, the GPS and its Surgeon’s Checklist™ software offer easy-to-follow steps designed to address challenges such as component positioning, sizing, limb length and offset restoration. The Radlink GPS consists of a computer system that uses one ultra-wide monitor.
A device/device assembly designed to be used with an analogue x-ray system to capture radiographic images and then generate digital x-ray images from them as part of a two-step process (computed radiography) for image viewing, storage, or hard-copy printing; it is not dedicated to dental use. It consists of an image reader/scanner and may also include an exposure unit with imaging receptor (e.g., a cassette containing a plate), or additional supportive hardware (e.g., a printer). The image is acquired on a photostimulatable substance (e.g., a phosphor screen mounted on a cassette plate) and converted into an electrical analogue signal in a laser scanner.