Jeet Medical expands portable veterinary endoscopy lineup
Jeet Medical (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd. says its new veterinary endoscopes are designed to bring high-definition imaging and flexible optics to clinics, mobile practices and field settings. The portfolio targets small- and large-animal diagnostics as demand rises for portable, point-of-care tools in veterinary care.
Why it matters: - Portable veterinary endoscopes are becoming more important as veterinarians look for point-of-care tools that work in clinics, mobile practices and field environments. - Jeet Medical is positioning its devices around that shift with compact systems built for high-resolution imaging and minimally invasive exams.
What happened: - Jeet Medical (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd. unveiled a portfolio of portable veterinary endoscopes on July 9, 2026. - The lineup includes the VET-5820 portable veterinary gastroscope, the RAE-201 flexible otoscope and the RAE-105 portable USB endoscope. - The company is based in Shenzhen, China, and manufactures veterinary endoscopes for small and large animal diagnostics.
The details: - The VET-5820 portable veterinary gastroscope has a 1500 mm working length. - The VET-8528 portable endoscope for large animals has an 8.5 mm outer diameter, a 2.8 mm working channel, 1080P HD resolution, a 1500 mm working length and 360° rotational control. - The VET-8528 is designed for gastrointestinal examinations in equine and bovine patients. - The RAE-201 veterinary flexible otoscope has a 3.1 mm outer diameter, a 600 mm working length and a 1.2 mm working channel. - The RAE-201 can accommodate biopsy forceps. - The RAE-201 delivers 160,000 pixels and a 180° bending angle for use in narrow passages. - Jeet Medical says its USB and WiFi endoscopes use a 1,000,000-pixel sensor. - The company also says large-animal gastroscopes use 1080P pixel resolution. - The RAE-105 series weighs less than 1 kg and connects through USB or WiFi to Android, Windows and iOS devices. - Jeet Medical says the RAE-105 series is designed to combine portability with imaging performance. - The company operates a 5,000 m² factory with 130 employees. - Jeet Medical exports 50% of its output to Europe, North America, Southeast Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. - The company holds ISO 13485 certification from SGS. - Jeet Medical has registered software copyrights for Multi-Light Source Vision Imaging System V1.0 and Multi-Camera Automatic Fusion System V1.0 with the China Copyright Protection Center. - Jeet Medical says those image-processing systems improve image clarity and color reproduction in JeetVet endoscopes. - The company says it can produce 2,000 units a month and has a 20-day lead time. - Jeet Medical offers OEM and ODM customization, including logo branding. - The company says every unit is tested before shipment. - Case studies cited by the company in Vietnam, Russia and Ukraine involved deployments of 30 to 50 units. - Those deployments reportedly improved non-surgical foreign body retrieval success rates by 40% and helped establish regional endoscopy training centers. - The training centers educated more than 300 veterinarians. - The company’s product brochure is available for download through its website. - Contact details listed in the release include troy@jeetmed.com, +86 755-23251842, +86 13381945549, WhatsApp +8613816158380, WeChat 13381945549 and www.jeetvet.com.
Between the lines: - Jeet Medical is trying to compete on both imaging quality and portability, which are the two main purchase drivers in veterinary endoscopy. - The mix of export scale, OEM/ODM services and software copyrights suggests the company is aiming at distributors as well as end users. - The training-center claims point to a broader commercial strategy: sell devices and build regional adoption through education.
What's next: - Jeet Medical says it will keep developing portable endoscopic tools for animal healthcare. - The company is pitching its brochure and customization options to distributors seeking a veterinary endoscope supplier.
The bottom line: - Jeet Medical is betting that smaller, high-definition endoscopes will help veterinarians do more diagnostic work outside specialized hospitals.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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