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March 5, 2026
Philips Rembra CT Radiology System Introduced in Europe
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- The Rembra CT system has received European CE Mark approval; in the United States, FDA 510(k) clearance is pending.
- The system features an 85-cm bore and Philips’ next-generation NanoPanel Precise XD detector.
- Rembra delivers up to 106 images per second with a throughput of up to 270 patients per day.
March 5, 2026—Royal Philips announced the launch of Rembra, its next-generation radiology CT system designed for acute and high-demand imaging. The company introduced the Rembra CT system at ECR 2026, the European Congress of Radiology annual meeting held in Vienna, Austria.
According to the company, Rembra can support 270 exams per day and provide reconstruction speeds of up to 106 images per second to help radiologists and clinicians access images quickly in stroke, trauma, and other urgent cases.
As outlined in Philips’ press release, Rembra’s features include the following:
- An 85-cm bore to help facilitate patient access and positioning
- A 60-cm standard field of view and an 85-cm extended field of view
- A patient table with a scan range of up to 2.3 meters and gantry-to-tablespace of 46 cm
- Built for operations at high-altitude environments of up to 5000 meters
Additionally, Rembra incorporates NanoPanel Precise XD, the company’s high-density detector that is designed to work with artificial intelligence to deliver high-dose-efficiency, high-resolution imaging at the source and support overall image quality and diagnostic confidence.
The NanoPanel Precise XD detector offers in-plane spatial resolution of 23 line pairs per cm, enabling sharp detail and visualization of fine anatomical structures down to 0.25 mm. A two-dimensional antiscatter grid provides strong scatter rejection to help preserve image clarity in challenging patient types, noted the company.
Professor Olivier Rouvière, MD, Head of Department at Hospices Civils de Lyon (Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Lyon) in Lyon France, commented on the new Rembra system in Philips’ press release.
“In interventional and high-acuity settings, precise access and efficient positioning are essential,” stated Prof. Rouvière. “Rembra’s 85-cm bore supports improved access as well as faster and safer positioning of long needles and instruments in complex procedures.”
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