MedPrax Market

MedPrax Market

Finding & Buying Medical Devices Made Simple

Browse our catalog of medical devices, compare detailed specifications and contact us for enquiry-led procurement support in any country or city worldwide.

Otoscope (Non-Electric)

Featured Equipment

Discover medical devices recently added to our catalog for hospitals, clinics and procurement teams.

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Otoscope (Non-Electric)
Diagnostic Equipment

Otoscope (Non-Electric)

A non-electric otoscope consisting of a magnifying lens system and a speculum holder, designed to be used with an external light source or head mirror for examination of the external auditory canal and tympanic membrane. The magnifying optics provide an enlarged, illuminated view of otological structures without requiring batteries or an integrated light.

Grooved Director
Surgical Instruments

Grooved Director

A flat, channelled instrument with a longitudinal groove along its surface and a probe-tipped end, used to guide a scalpel or scissors along a safe path during tissue dissection and incision. The groove cradles the cutting blade, preventing it from deviating laterally and protecting underlying structures from inadvertent injury.

Manual Hospital Bed
Medical Furniture

Manual Hospital Bed

A multi-position patient bed with manually operated crank mechanisms that adjust the head section, knee section, and overall bed height to facilitate patient positioning, comfort, and clinical access. The bed frame is constructed from tubular steel with a four-section mattress platform, collapsible side rails, and four locking castors for safe mobility. It is the primary inpatient sleeping and treatment surface in hospitals and long-term care facilities.

Hospital Stretcher (Non-motorized)
Medical Furniture

Hospital Stretcher (Non-motorized)

A wheeled patient transport platform with a padded mattress surface, collapsible side rails, and a push-handle frame, designed for the intra-hospital movement of patients between wards, operating theatres, imaging departments, and emergency areas. The non-motorized stretcher relies on manual propulsion by hospital attendants and features a height-adjustable, articulating backrest for semi-recumbent positioning.

Manual Nasal Aspirator (Bulb Type)
Patient Care

Manual Nasal Aspirator (Bulb Type)

A soft, compressible rubber or silicone bulb with a tapered nasal tip used to suction excess mucus from the nares of infants and young children who are unable to clear their nasal passages independently. The caregiver compresses the bulb, gently inserts the tip into the nostril, and slowly releases to create negative pressure that aspirates the nasal secretions.

Manual Ear Syringe (Bulb Type)
Patient Care

Manual Ear Syringe (Bulb Type)

A rubber or silicone bulb syringe with a smooth, flanged ear tip designed for the gentle irrigation of the external auditory canal with warm water or saline solution to remove impacted cerumen (earwax). The bulb generates a controlled stream of irrigating fluid when compressed, and the flanged tip prevents excessive insertion depth, reducing the risk of tympanic membrane injury.

Irrigation Syringe (Reusable)
Surgical Instruments

Irrigation Syringe (Reusable)

A large-volume, piston-type syringe—typically 50 mL to 100 mL capacity—with a catheter-tip or bulb-tip nozzle, used for wound irrigation, bladder irrigation, and enteral feeding bolus delivery. Constructed from autoclavable polypropylene or stainless steel, the reusable irrigation syringe generates a controlled, adjustable stream of irrigating fluid to cleanse wounds, lavage body cavities, and flush drainage tubes.

Patient Identification Band
Patient Care

Patient Identification Band

A disposable wristband applied to every admitted patient for the purpose of accurate identity verification throughout the hospital stay. The band displays critical identifying information including the patient's name, date of birth, medical record number, and barcode or QR code for electronic health record integration. It is made from soft, hypoallergenic, waterproof material that remains securely fastened without causing skin irritation.

Browse by Specialty

Access targeted medical inventories for specialized hospital departments and clinical requirements.

Cardiology

ECG machines, defibrillators, and advanced hemodynamic monitoring systems.

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Radiology

Digital X-Ray, high-resolution ultrasound, and MRI imaging accessories.

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ICU & Critical Care

Ventilators, anesthesia machines, and modular patient monitoring units.

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Surgery

Surgical tables, shadowless LED lights, and endoscopic equipment.

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Procurement guide

How MedPrax Helps with Medical Devices Marketplace

Tell MedPrax what you need to source

Explore medical devices, hospital equipment, ICU equipment, surgical instruments, pricing guides, and setup checklists from MedPrax Market. Buyers usually arrive with a practical problem: equipment is needed for a hospital department, a clinic opening, a diagnostic center, a distributor order, a tender, a replacement purchase or an urgent delivery location. MedPrax can help once that goal is clear.

A product name is useful, but the sourcing conversation becomes stronger when the enquiry also includes department, quantity, city, timeline, preferred brands, installation needs, documentation needs and whether alternatives are acceptable.

Not sure where to start?

If you are looking for a specific device, compare available options and send the requirement with quantity, delivery city and preferred configuration. If you are planning a new facility or department, share the full setup context so MedPrax can help think through equipment, accessories, documentation, installation and supplier coordination together.

If you already have a preferred brand, manufacturer or model in mind, mention it in the enquiry. If delivery location, import planning, installation or regional documentation matters, include that context at the beginning instead of waiting until quotation follow-up.

  • Ask for a specific device when you already know the requirement.
  • Share a department or setup plan when multiple items must work together.
  • Mention preferred brands or models, but allow alternatives if budget or availability matters.
  • Include city, country, timeline, installation and documentation needs early.

What to prepare before enquiring

Before contacting MedPrax, decide whether you need a single item, multiple alternatives, a bulk order or a full setup. Mention whether brand preference is strict or whether equivalent options can be discussed. If the purchase is urgent, include the required delivery date and whether installation or training must happen before clinical use.

For cross-border or institutional enquiries, add destination country, destination city, customs needs, documentation expectations and approval stage. This helps MedPrax understand whether the conversation should focus on product fit, commercial comparison, import planning, documentation or setup support.

Need help choosing?

Not every purchasing decision comes down to specifications alone. Service support, warranty coverage, consumable costs, accessories, installation requirements and long-term maintenance can all change the right choice.

Tell MedPrax what you are trying to achieve and what constraints matter most. The team can help you evaluate suitable products and suppliers, whether the requirement is one device, ten units for a city delivery, or a complete department setup.