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Volat

Product
Developers: SDS LLC
Branches: Pharmaceuticals, Medicine, Healthcare

Content

History

2025: Product Announcement

In April 2025, SDS, which is a resident of the Mosmedpark technopark, presented the Volat portable medical complex for functional spectral-dynamic diagnostics (FSD) of the human body. A device operating on the basis of recording electromagnetic vibrations from the surface of the patient's skin will be supplied to medical institutions at a price of ₽6,3 to ₽6,7 million.

The Volat complex is based on a secure PMVU-1713 laptop designed to work in extreme conditions. The device is equipped with a 17.3-inch FullHD screen with a brightness of 200 cd/m ², an Intel processor with a clock speed of up to 4.4 GHz, 32 GB of RAM and a removable 512 GB drive. The complex supports work with both domestic Astra Linux and Windows 10.

VOLAT

The principle of operation of Volat is to record and analyze electromagnetic vibrations of the patient's skin. For diagnostics, a person places his palm on the surface of the electrode of the device, after which the wave field of the body is recorded for 35 seconds. The result is a personal "barcode of the body," which is processed by the complex and converted into medical markers that help the doctor study the patient's health.

The developers claim that "the medical technology of FSD diagnostics at the moment has no analogues in the world." According to them, the complex was tested on the basis of the 35th polyclinic in Minsk, and "the clinically confirmed reliability of the method is more than 92%." Deliveries of the device to the market are planned during 2025.

However, experts express doubts about the effectiveness of the proposed diagnostic method. Deputy Head of the Laboratory of Personal Medical Assistants of the NTI Competence Center "Bionic Engineering in Medicine" SamSMU Peter Kshnyakin stressed that the method of functional spectral-dynamic diagnostics has not yet been approved clinically within the framework of evidence-based medicine, therefore such systems require deep study and clinical randomized trials.[1]

Notes