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  1. Home
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  3. Incubators and Open Care

Incubators and Open Care

Products Information
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Incubators and Open Care

4 Products
Incubators and Open Care - Babyroo-TN300

Dräger Babyroo TN300

  • Configurable open care warmer for the labour and delivery unit and NICU
  • Provides stable temperature with two combined heat sources
  • Includes optional Respiratory Support Module with AutoBreath
  • Meets resuscitation guidelines …
and supports intuitive and ergonomic handling
Incubators and Open Care - Babyleo-TN500-Release-2

Dräger Babyleo TN500

  • IncuWarmer supporting open care, closed care, and transition
  • Provides optimal thermoregulation with three synchronised heat sources
  • Creates an environment conductive to developmental and neuroprotective care
  • Facilitates qui…
ck and comfortable access to the baby
Incubators and Open Care - isolette-8000-plus

Isolette 8000 plus

  • Provides stable, cocoon-like environment for the baby
  • Continuously monitors both central and peripheral body temperature
  • Includes Condensation Management System
  • Designed for easy cleaning and servicing
Incubators and Open Care - Isolette-TI500

Isolette® TI500

  • High-performance transport incubator for neonates
  • Provides stable temperature in various power conditions
  • Quick access to the infant for intubation or CPR
  • Designed for easy cleaning and maximum infection prevention

A nurturing environment to grow and thrive

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As your acute care specialist, we help to establish a safe, calming environment for developing lungs, brains, eyes, and ears. Our incubators create a personalized microclimate for the baby, balancing thermoregulation, light, and sound for stable, nurturing newborn care.

What’s in a temperature?

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Caregiver’s hand rests on baby’s head in the NICU

What happens if a baby gets too cold?

We lose heat through four different mechanisms: convection, radiation, conduction and evaporation.1 When a newborn’s temperature is too low, it causes stress and can exacerbate lung problems, leading to respiratory distress.2  Also, the risk for metabolic acidosis, hypoglycemia and for jaundice rises 2,3, which can in turn increase the length of hospital stay. All these issues associated with hypothermia can contribute to a substantial proportion of neonatal mortality, mostly as a co-morbidity.4 Minimising all four types of heat loss and preventing cold stress is therefore essential.

Baby holds onto caregiver’s finger while resting in the NICU

How does the body react to environmental temperatures?

The body attempts to maintain its temperature within narrow limits and, if exposed to thermal stresses, will utilise energy to achieve temperature stability. In day-to-day neonatal care, it’s not possible to measure heat transfer or energy expenditure in babies, so information from temperature measurements is relied on. A better overall picture of the thermal stresses experienced by a baby emerges if more than one body temperature is measured simultaneously.

Dr. Manuel Sánchez Luna talks about how cold stress affects premature babies and why thermoregulation is important

The consequences of heat loss

Even for adults, hypothermia can have very serious consequences. For very low birth weight infants, the consequences are much more serious. Dr. Manuel Sánchez Luna, MD, PhD of the University Hospital, Madrid, explains that even brief interruptions in warming therapy can be problematic.

How can we help a premature baby regulate body temperature?

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Thermal image of a Draeger incubator during thermorugation therapy

Thermoregulation and ThermoMonitoring

In comparison with an adult, a premature baby is not provided with mechanisms like sweating and shivering and its metabolism is limited as well.5 The only response to cold stress is vasoconstriction5, which is seen with ThermoMonitoring. Therefore, it should be the target of nursing care to keep the baby within its “thermo neutral” range in order to provide the best conditions for growth and maturity.

Prof. Dr. Egbert Herting talks about why a bigger focus should be put on thermoregulation in  neonatal care

The relevance of thermoregulation

Warming therapy for premature babies is not a new topic – and yet comparatively speaking, little research has been done on this subject. Prof. Dr. Egbert Herting of the Clinic for Paediatric and Youth Medicine at the University Hospital in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, talks about the need for more attention to be given to this aspect of care.

References

1) Koop LK, Tadi P. Physiology, Heat Loss. [Updated 2023 Jul 17]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025 Jan-. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK541107/

2) Yitayew YA, Aitaye EB, Lechissa HW, Gebeyehu LO. Neonatal Hypothermia and Associated Factors among Newborns Admitted in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Dessie Referral Hospital, Amhara Region, Northeast Ethiopia. Int J Pediatr. 2020 Sep 14;2020:3013427. doi: 10.1155/2020/3013427. PMID: 33014077; PMCID: PMC7519202.

3) Bhutani, Vinod K et al. “Diagnosis and management of hyperbilirubinemia in the term neonate: for a safer first week.” Pediatric clinics of North America vol. 51,4 (2004): 843-61, vii. doi:10.1016/j.pcl.2004.03.011

4) McCall, E.M., Alderdice, F., Halliday, H.L., Jenkins, J.G. and Vohra, S. (2010) Interventions to prevent hypothermia at birth in preterm and/or low birthweight infants. Cochrane Neonatal Group Interventions to prevent hypothermia at birth in preterm and/or low birth weight infants - PubMed

5) Knobel RB, Holditch-Davis D, Schwartz TA, Wimmer JE Jr. Extremely low birth weight preterm infants lack vasomotor response in relationship to cold body temperatures at birth. J Perinatol. 2009 Dec;29(12):814-21. doi: 10.1038/jp.2009.99. Epub 2009 Jul 23. PMID: 19626030; PMCID: PMC2787712.

Baby is being treated for jaundice in the NICU

Newborn jaundice treatment

Newborn jaundice treatment – from screening to phototherapy – has changed considerably over the past several years. Read about when and how to screen for it and the types of gentle and effective treatment that are available for neonates today. Also, get some useful take-away information to help families of jaundiced newborns through a time of anxiety and uncertainties.

Learn more
A preemie is supplied with oxygen

Neonatal ventilation and lung protection

Neonatal ventilation is an important part of the care you deliver in the NICU – but ventilation of preemies and neonates remains a substantial challenge for even the most experienced caregiver. Read about neonatal ventilation strategies and gain a deeper understanding on how to avoid damage to the immature respiratory systems and brains of premature babies.

Learn more
Nurse monitors the amount of light reaching a premature baby in the NICU

NICU lighting

When it comes to premature babies, light is a very complex matter. We need to avoid too much exposure and brightness and yet understand how the right amount of light at the right times can have a positive influence on development. Here, we discuss how creating a supportive light environment in the NICU, with the right care and the right technology, can truly benefit your littlest patients.

Learn more
Caregiver’s hand rests on premature baby in the NICU

Noise in the NICU

For babies in the NICU, noise presents a complex issue. Loud noises can be especially harmful to premature babies, sometimes causing hearing damage and developmental delays down the road. However, newborns respond extremely well to beneficial and comforting sounds. Here, we look at good versus bad noises and how to create a nurturing NICU noise environment.

Learn more
Premature baby is cared for in the NICU

Developmental care in the NICU

NICUs can be tough environments – for babies, parents and caregivers. Pro-developmental and family-centred care concepts help to remove the factors that cause stress. Learn about how this promotes neural and physiological growth in premature babies – and also helps caregivers feel less stress, so the focus can stay on delivering the best possible care to the newborns.

Learn more
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Dräger Services

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We offer comprehensive consulting and support services for our devices to ensure maximum performance for your department. With our experience, flexibility and uncompromising quality standards, we are always by your side – with services that are tailored to your needs.

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Medical staff with surgical mask

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Get in touch with Dräger

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Contact Us Hospital
Draeger Medical UK Ltd.

The Willows, Mark Road, Hemel Hempstead, Herts, HP2 7BW

+44 (0) 1442 213 542

Call us from Mon - Thurs 8:30am - 5pm
Fri 8:30am - 4:30pm

Draeger Ireland Ltd.

Unit 2, 4075 Kingswood Road, Citywest Business Campus, Dublin 24

+353 (1) 428 6400

Call us from Mon - Fri 9am - 5pm

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