Endoscopy 1985; 17(5): 167-169
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1018491
EDITORIAL

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Video Endoscopy

Fundamentals and ProblemsL. Demling, H.J. Hagel
  • Medical Department of the University Hospital Erlangen-Nuremberg (Director: Professor L. Demling, M.D.)
Paper presented at the XVth congress of the German Society for Endoscopy held at Erlangen on March 22, 1985.
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
17 March 2008 (online)

Summary

The video system represents a new endoscopic technique with major advantages, some of which point the way into the future. This system permits a large number of persons to participate directly in the examination. Documentation is more comprehensive and more reliable, and pathological processes can be observed with the aid of video tape recordings. It is to be expected that the optical elements of the video endoscope will become smaller, while the instruments will become longer. Since there is no loss of light with these endoscopes, it would appear possible that they will make the entire small bowel accessible to inspection. Compared with conventional standards, the colour quality on the video monitor screen, in particular in the red range, and of the video photograph still leaves something to be desired. User-friendly equipment provided with an automatic colour adaption facility, is required.

The good thing about the future is, of course, that it comes slowly - and this applies to video endoscopy, too. Since July, 1984, our department has been acquiring experience with the video endoscope manufactured by the firm of Welch Allyn, New York, and, in the meantime, we have examined 97 patients with this system, 80 in the upper, 17 in the lower gastrointestinal tract. The heart of the video endoscope is a light-sensitive microprocessor silicon chip, roughly 4 × 4 mm in size, which acts like a miniature television camera. Properly, it is termed a charge coupled device chip (CCD chip). Utilizing the crystalline structure of the silicon chip, and its property for thermal oxidation, such electronic components as diodes, capacitors and resistors are integrated onto it. With the aid of this CCD chip, optical signals are converted to electrical impulses and conducted, sequentially, to the video processor, and from thence to the video monitor.

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