In the high-stakes world of clinical electrophysiology (EP), precision is not just a goal—it is a prerequisite for patient safety. Cardiologists and EP labs generate terabytes of complex data daily, from intracardiac electrograms to 3D activation maps. Making sense of this data requires more than just a keen eye; it requires robust, specialized software. For over two decades, one name has stood out in the industry: EP Evaluator. With the release of EP Evaluator 12, the platform has raised the bar for what clinicians can expect from post-processing, archiving, and reporting.
EP Evaluator 12 is a clinical decision support software designed for electrophysiologists and cardiac arrhythmia teams to manage and analyze catheter ablation procedures and electrophysiology studies. ep evaluator 12
Manual measurement of intervals (PR, QRS, QT, AH, HV) is tedious and prone to inter-operator variability. EP Evaluator 12 introduces intelligent signal detection algorithms that automatically mark pacing spikes, local activation times, and signal onsets. The software learns from user corrections, continuously improving its annotation accuracy. For a busy EP physician, this can cut post-case review time by more than 50%. In the high-stakes world of clinical electrophysiology (EP),
Switching to EP Evaluator 12 is designed to be low-friction. The system runs on standard Windows 10/11 workstations with moderate hardware requirements (i7 processor, 16GB RAM, dedicated GPU for 3D rendering). Installation typically takes one day per workstation. For over two decades, one name has stood
Data migration from legacy systems is handled by EP Dimensions’ onboarding team, who will convert proprietary database formats into the open .EPXML standard used by version 12. This ensures that no historical patient data is lost during the upgrade.
One of the most significant pain points in a modern EP lab is the "Tower of Babel" problem—different recording systems (Bard Labsystem, GE CardioLab, Siemens Sensis, etc.) speak different data formats. EP Evaluator 12 acts as a universal translator. It can import data from virtually any EP recording system onto a single, unified review platform. This allows a lab to compare a historical study recorded on an old system with a current study on a new system side-by-side.