Wound Care · Medical Device

Reconciler

A fully enclosed, sterile therapeutic system replacing traditional open wound handling with a controlled, sensor-enabled environment — integrating real-time imaging, AI-assisted modulation, and coordinated therapeutic delivery.

Reconciler

The Wound Management Problem

Traditional wound care relies on open handling — exposing wounds to external contamination at every intervention, introducing variability in treatment delivery, and making consistent physiological monitoring difficult. Complex wounds in hospital and clinical settings require precise, reproducible care that conventional open approaches cannot guarantee.

Reconciler replaces this paradigm with a fully enclosed, sterile therapeutic system. By introducing a regulated chamber-based approach, it eliminates environmental exposure, standardises intervention conditions, and enables structured treatment delivery within defined safety parameters.

5 Integrated Capabilities

  • Closed Sterile Treatment Environment

    A fully enclosed chamber isolates the wound from external contamination throughout every intervention — ensuring controlled, reproducible treatment conditions.

  • Real-Time Imaging and Multi-Parameter Physiological Sensing

    Continuous imaging and physiological monitoring provide a live clinical picture of wound state, enabling data-driven decision-making at every stage of treatment.

  • Coordinated UV, IR, and Oxygen-Based Therapeutic Delivery

    Multiple therapeutic modalities — ultraviolet, infrared, and supplemental oxygen — are delivered in coordinated sequence within the enclosed environment, replacing the need for separate interventions.

  • AI-Assisted Therapy Modulation

    AI guidance adjusts therapy parameters in real time within defined safety thresholds — reducing clinician variability and maintaining consistent treatment intensity across sessions.

  • Enclosed Waste Management with Protected Intervention Zone

    Integrated waste containment within the system boundary protects both the wound and the clinical environment during and after each intervention.