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MELLIFLUUS CORE 1
MC-1

The risk is not just the major surgery.

Routine anesthesia also carries a risk.

 

Critical changes begin quietly.

 

  • Oxygen saturation drops early

  • Blood pressure drops without visible warning signs

  • Complications often arise during the recovery phase.

 

Without monitoring, these developments remain undetected.
Clinical experience alone does not replace continuous measurement.

 

Even experienced veterinarians cannot reliably assess oxygen saturation, blood pressure, or pulse through observation alone. Monitoring creates clarity — at every stage of the clinical pathway.

Monitoring doesn't end in the operating room. It determines the entire clinical process.

In modern veterinary medicine, monitoring is not an isolated function. It influences transitions, capacity, and clinical safety.
Available monitoring capacity determines how stable and reliable a clinical workflow is.

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Transitions represent the most critical moments.

  • Monitoring is interrupted during transfer

  • Devices remain tied to the operating room

  • Reconnection is delayed or incomplete

  • Time pressure increases the risk of gaps.

  • Overflow patients reduce monitoring consistency

 

Monitoring is often unavailable when needed.

 

  • Peak times increase the need for monitoring.

  • Installed systems are bound

  • Additional patients remain inadequately monitored.

  • Redistribution of equipment reduces efficiency

  • Emergencies require immediately available systems.

 

 

Evidence from clinical practice

  • 20–40% of dogs develop hypotension during anesthesia¹

  • Hypoxemia is frequently detected during the recovery phase²

  • Most complications occur peri- or postoperatively.³

  • Guidelines recommend continuous monitoring⁴

  • Anesthesia-related mortality remains higher in animals than in humans⁵

  • Early detection of physiological changes significantly improves intervention outcomes⁶

¹ Bille 2012; ² Dyson 2017; ³ Brodbelt 2008 (CEPSAF); ⁴ ACVAA/AAHA Guidelines ⁵ Brodbelt, Anesthetic mortality review, Vet J, 2009⁶ ACVAA Monitoring Recommendations, 2019; updated monitoring consensus statements 2023–2025, AVA (Association of Veterinary Anaesthetists

How MC-1 structurally changes the clinical workflow

Monitoring becomes independent of location, systems, and infrastructure.

The system stays with the patient — not in the room.

Continuous monitoring of key vital parameters

The MC-1 measurement — the foundation for safe clinical decisions at every stage.

  • SpO₂ — Oxygenation

  • Blood Pressure — Perfusion

  • Heart Rate & Rhythm — Cardiac Stability

  • Pulse — Circulatory Status

  • Temperature — Thermoregulation

​All key vital parameters.
Integrated as standard. No additional modules required. For
stationary and/or mobile use.

Only the combination of these parameters enables reliable clinical assessment — and significantly improves patient safety.

Veterinary monitoring and clinical decision support with advanced MedTech systems

Economically sound in clinical practice

  • Expansion of monitoring capacity without additional systems

  • No capital tied up in infrastructure

  • No structural modifications required

  • Investment remains focused on clinical use

  • More patients can be monitored safely at the same time

  • Scalable with procedural volume

Direct product access 

Secure Implementation

  • Mobile use — stays with the patient

  • No integration projects required

  • One-touch operation

  • No operational disruption due to installation

  • No dependency on IT systems

  • No mandatory device training

  • Immediately available when additional capacity is needed

  • 30-day trial in real clinical practice

  • 2-year warranty (+ optional extension)

Contact & Order via Email

For questions or individual requirements

Detailed information on application, system, and specifications — MC-1

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Flyer "MC-1 Monitoring VET PET in Emergency Care"

mAAbbu

Clinical Competence Center

 

Practical knowledge and equipment instructions for everyday clinical use.

 

Diagnostics

  • International hemodynamic monitoring guidelines

  • Clinical studies and references

 

Daily life in the hospital

  • International hemodynamic monitoring guidelines

  • Clinical studies and references

 

 

Clinical knowledge, guidelines, and studies for veterinary practice — structured, evidence-based, and continuously developed.

Additional clinical areas are continuously integrated.

mAAbbu

Clinical Competence Center 

Veterinary monitoring and clinical decision support with advanced MedTech systems

Direct contact

Customer Service

Direct support for application, ordering, and service inquiries
Mon–Sat, 7:30 AM – 9:30 PM

+49 (0)8821 9667481
+49 (0)171 4312883

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© 2026 mAAbbu. All rights reserved.

COMPANY

mAAbbu GmbH (Ltd)

Sparchner Street 12
6330 Kufstein / Austria

Company No. (At): 631526s
VAT Identification Number

(EU VAT ID): ATU81613247

mAAbbu — developed from clinical requirements, designed as a system for veterinary medicine, and continuously evolving.

Request information

Questions about our solutions or systems?
Our team will be happy to assist you.

For questions regarding application, integration, or ordering. Response typically within 24 hours.

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