
I met the Medicalcooling team at Web Summit 2024, and their pitch was simple and bold: start brain-protective cooling immediately—right in the ambulance—using cold-air ventilation. It’s a clear answer to a long-standing gap in emergency care where “time is brain.”
🚑 The Problem: Brain Injury Starts Before the Hospital
After cardiac arrest or severe stroke, the brain is starved of oxygen and then hit by reperfusion injury. Even a short delay can mean worse outcomes, lifelong disability, or death. Cooling (targeted temperature management) is a known neuroprotective strategy, but in practice it often starts late—typically after hospital arrival—because existing solutions are cumbersome for first responders. Medicalcooling focuses on moving cooling upstream into the EMS workflow.
❄️ The Solution: Cold-Air Ventilation for Early Neuroprotection
Medicalcooling is developing an ambulance-ready ventilator concept (“Airchill”) that delivers cooled airflow during assisted ventilation to start therapeutic hypothermia on scene and en route. The company’s materials describe a system built around liquid-oxygen–driven cooling, with integration points for ECG/defibrillation and a vacuum pump, plus optional neuroprotective gases (argon/xenon) as part of the broader concept. The core idea: begin cooling as soon as possible to limit tissue damage.
🧳 Built for EMS Reality
- Designed to fit into EMS equipment stacks and processes.
- Emphasis on usability and speed—cooling should begin without delaying transport.
- Messaging targeted at “bringing therapeutic hypothermia to EMS vehicles.”

📡 Telemedicine & Billing Hooks
Medicalcooling’s recent event materials also highlight telemedicine features (connecting the ambulance to hospital pathways) and reimbursement integration to support adoption at scale—both crucial for real-world deployment and health-system ROI.
Medicalcooling also communicates that early, device-delivered cooling can double survival in cardiac-arrest contexts; we present this as the company’s claim and direction of travel. As with any medical device, clinical validation and regulatory clearance are the ultimate gatekeepers to adoption.
🧠 What Makes It Different
⚡ “Cooling at the Airway”
Most cooling technologies are surface or intravascular. Medicalcooling’s “cooled ventilation” approach attacks the time-to-treatment problem head-on by leveraging the airway during assisted breathing—right where EMS teams are already working.
🧩 System Thinking (Not Just a Box)
Positioning goes beyond hardware: integration with defibrillators/ECG, telemedicine routing, and reimbursement flows. That ecosystem view matters for EMS procurement and adoption.
🏥 Use Cases Across the Pathway
Primary focus is post-resuscitation care and acute stroke scenarios where speed is decisive. The message: earlier cooling, less irreversible damage.

👥 The Team (Quick Snapshot)
- Fabian Temme — Founder/CEO; background spanning paramedic practice and engineering; the public face of the project.
- Florian Rochler — Representative (Berlin) / CVO in some event listings.
- Armin Kaup — Financial Advisor; mathematics/tax advisory profile also listed on the team page.
Explore the team and concept on the Medicalcooling website.
🤝 YOUR R&D – Where We Could Collaborate
As a HealthTech product studio, YOUR R&D helps hardware-adjacent medical ventures de-risk software and accelerate market access. Here’s how we’d plug in:
Regulatory-Ready Software & Documentation
Telemedicine, Cloud & Data Pipelines
Embedded & Edge Software
Reimbursement & Adoption Tooling
🔗 Learn More & Connect
- Company site: medicalcooling.com (concept, team, news).
- Event profile: German Pavilion @ Web Summit (telemedicine & billing notes, fundraising targets).
- YOUR R&D: yourrnd.com (healthtech software and product delivery).
✅ Conclusion
Medicalcooling is betting on a simple but powerful idea: start cooling in the ambulance to protect the brain when seconds matter. If they can translate this concept into regulatory-cleared, EMS-ready hardware with integrated data and reimbursement workflows, the impact could be significant.
#MedTech #HealthTech #EmergencyMedicine #TherapeuticHypothermia #SoftwareDevelopment #Telemedicine #Innovation



