Denmark-based Teton, a company that provides AI companions to help nurses monitor patients and optimize workflows, announced that it has created real-time live 3D reconstruction using Gefion, the Danish national supercomputer.
The aim is to help nurses recognize risks early, reduce paperwork, and improve patient care.
Gefion, run by the Danish AI Innovation Centre, is being built NVIDIA DGX system. Teton uses the NVIDIA DGX system to “generate digital twin data.”
According to Nvidia, the DGX station is a “high-performance Nvidia Grace Blackwell Desktop Supercomputer equipped with Nvidia Blackwell Ultra Platform.” This allows AI developers, researchers, data scientists and students to prototype and fine-tune and infer large models on the desktop.
Additionally, users can run the model locally or deploy it to NVIDIA DGX clouds, other accelerated clouds, or to another data center infrastructure.
Digital Twin provides a real-time view of what’s going on within a 3D care facility.
In a statement, the company described Teton AI Gym as a simulation engine that utilizes synthetic data to create a real 3D care environment for realistic patient-staff interactions.
The company said it showed that early pilots could cut night shift jobs by up to 25%.
“Our system allows us to understand what people are doing, how they sleep, how they breathe, where they are lying, where they are lying, and how they walk,” said Mikkel Wad Thorsen, co-founder and CEO of Teton. MobiHealthNews.
“All of this can be done in real time and provide ongoing indicators about the health of our patients and the care they receive,” he said. “Operating in 3D was a game changer for the TEO-2 model, and was only possible with access to the supercomputer. All these data points allow for a significant acceleration of iteration times and unlocking new scales for the next-generation model, TEO-2.”
Bigger trends
Other companies involved in the 3D healthcare space include RESTOR3D is a 3D printed orthopedic implant care company that raised $38 million in April. Summers Value Partners joined the round along with existing and new private investors.
RESTOR3D offers joint exchange and 3D printing of Osseointegrative Materials, an AI-based planning and design automation tool.
Taiwan-based Medtech Company in 2024 Surglasses announced that it has implemented an augmented reality-based surgical navigation system in Thailand.
Thai Veterans General Hospital and Chulalongkorn Hospital performed their first AR-guided surgery using the Kaduseus system.
Designed for spinal surgery, the Surgrass system provides surgeons with 3D visualization and displays the patient’s internal anatomy during procedures, including bones, tissues and organs.
Another Taiwanese company, Jellox Biotech has worked with Mayo Clinic to bring AI imaging solutions for cancer diagnosis to research and clinical practice.
The organization has signed a know-how agreement to further develop and verify Jellox’s technology. The company offers 3D pathology imaging solutions that use AI to provide spatial analysis of cancer tissue images.