VerodexVET · Veterinary

Anesthetic-gas safety your clinic can prove.

Verodex tracks waste anesthetic gas against the NIOSH 2 ppm limit, during and after surgery. It watches your scavenging for failures and keeps an OSHA-ready record, including recovery, where exposure is easy to miss.

Clinic statusLive
Surgery Suite A1.3 ppm
Recovery area0.8 ppm
Scavenging lineConnected
Exhaust fanNominal
Today’s recordComplete

The daily risk

Where veterinary teams actually get exposed.

Waste anesthetic gas isn’t one event. It builds across the day, in moments most clinics never see.

Induction

Mask & chamber inductions

The biggest spikes happen at induction. Masking a patient or filling a chamber releases gas into the room before the circuit is sealed.

Recovery

The recovery area

Patients keep breathing out gas after surgery. Recovery is rarely scavenged or monitored, so this exposure is the easiest to miss.

Equipment

Scavenging failures

A loose connection, a kinked line, or a failing fan quietly raises exposure for everyone in the room, usually with no visible sign.

What Verodex does in your clinic.

Monitor against the limit

Verodex tracks waste anesthetic gas against the NIOSH 2 ppm limit, in the surgery suite and in recovery, around the clock.

Catch scavenging failures

Verodex watches your scavenging line and exhaust for disconnects and faults, and alerts staff before exposure builds.

Keep the record

Every reading, alert, and response goes into an automatic, OSHA-ready record you can export any time.

The setup

Two nodes. One verified reading.

VerodexVET is a simple two-node setup: a sensing unit where the gas is, and a second node that double-checks the reading and covers the area you’d otherwise miss.

Node 1 · Sensing unit

In the surgery suite

Sits where the work happens. Tracks waste anesthetic gas against the NIOSH 2 ppm limit and watches the scavenging line and exhaust for failures.

Node 2 · Verification node

Covering recovery

Double-checks the suite reading, so one drifting sensor can’t log a wrong number. Also covers recovery, where exposure is easy to miss.

An honest note on the gas

Verodex monitors and alerts. Carbon filtration reduces halogenated agents. Nitrous oxide can’t be filtered out. It needs active scavenging. Verodex verifies that your scavenging is working and tells you the moment it isn’t.

Clinic FAQ

Questions clinics ask.

How is this different from a badge?
A dosimeter badge samples passively and goes to a lab; the result comes back weeks later and tells you nothing in the moment. Verodex monitors continuously against the NIOSH 2 ppm limit, alerts staff before exposure builds, and logs every reading, so you have proof as it happens, not a verdict weeks later.
Does it replace my scavenging?
No. Verodex doesn’t replace active scavenging. It verifies that your scavenging is working and alerts you the moment it isn’t, whether that’s a disconnect or an exhaust fault. Nitrous oxide in particular can only be controlled by scavenging, which Verodex watches.
What does an inspection record look like?
A timestamped, exportable report: every reading, every alert, and how your team responded, mapped to the NIOSH and OSHA references, the evidence an inspector or insurer actually asks for.
What does a pilot involve, and when?
We’re redesigning the current unit now, so we’re registering the clinics who want it first. When pilot units are ready, a pilot is simple: a sensing unit in your surgery suite and a verification node covering recovery, monitoring against the NIOSH 2 ppm limit, with the live dashboard and exportable records. Register your interest and we’ll size it with you when we reach out.

Prove your clinic’s air. Be first in line.

We’re redesigning the unit and lining up the veterinary clinics who want it first.