AENOR UNE-EN 60601-1-10/A1 Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance - Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers
Список продуктов
Данный раздел/документ содержится в продуктах:
Данный раздел/документ содержится в продуктах:
Asociacion Espanola de Normalizacion y Certificacion
Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance - Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers
N UNE-EN 60601-1-10/A1
Автоматический перевод:
Медицинское электрооборудование - Часть 1-10: Общие требования для основной безопасности и существенной производительности - Сопутствующий Стандарт: Требования для разработки физиологических контроллеров с обратной связью
Эквиваленты данного стандарта:
- CEI EN 60601-1-10/A1 Medical electrical equipment Part 1: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance - Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers
- CSA CAN/CSA-C22.2 NO. 60601-1-10-09 AMD 1 Amendment 1 Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance — Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers - First Edition
- IEC 60601-1-10 Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance – Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers - Edition 1.1 Consolidated Reprint
- BSI BS EN 60601-1-10 + A1 Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance - Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers - AMD: June 30, 2015
- CENELEC EN 60601-1-10 Medical electrical equipment - Part 1-10: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance - Collateral Standard: Requirements for the development of physiologic closed-loop controllers



