May 19-20, 2026

Meet Zeto at AACN NTI 2026 in San Diego

We’re excited to join the critical care nursing community at AACN NTI 2026 in San Diego.

Visit the Zeto booth #613 and attend our hands-on skill lab to experience point-of-care EEG technology designed for critical care settings.

Schedule a Meeting

Featured in The Pitt Season Finale  

If you watched the season finale of The Pitt, you may have noticed Zeto’s point-of-care EEG technology featured during the episode.

We’re excited to bring the same technology to AACN NTI 2026 and give attendees an opportunity to see it in person, learn about rapid EEG workflows, and explore how neurological monitoring can fit into critical care environments.

Hands-On Skill Lab Experience 

In addition to our booth presence, Zeto will host a hands-on skill lab station where attendees can:

  • Experience Zeto’s rapid EEG system firsthand
  • Learn how fast EEG setup can be performed in critical care settings
Whether you are new to EEG or looking to improve neurological monitoring workflows, our team will be available to demonstrate practical applications and answer your questions.

Why Visit Zeto at NTI?

Built with bedside teams in mind, Zeto’s rapid EEG solution is designed to help critical care nurses simplify neurological monitoring workflows and support faster patient assessment in acute care settings.

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Hands-On Skill: POC EEG Setup

Learn a new skill and practice rapid EEG setup on your peers with the Zeto team
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NeuroPulse - AI Seizure Detection

See how our AI-powered seizure detection (enabled by encevis) works
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NeuroNotis AI Report

Combined AI seizure detection with experienced technical review by R. EEG T.
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Zeto vs Other POC EEGs

Learn the difference between Zeto and other point-of-care EEG systems
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Works on All Hair Types

Test the headset on different hair types and styles
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Not just EEG, but Video EEG

Check how helpful a video EEG with a fully integrated camera could be
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What Customers Say

“We are keeping these patients local. With rapid EEG, the team can quickly determine whether a patient is seizing or presenting with non-epileptic symptoms. Families stay involved, patients stay near home, and clinicians make decisions based on data rather than uncertainty. It’s meaningful. I wish we’d done this sooner.“

Kristen Marin
Ukiah Adventist Hospital

We dug into two years of ER transfer logs and half of those transfers were for some sort of neurological reasons. Of those, about 10 patients a month we felt could admit instead of shipping out if we had onsite EEG capabilities. We do utilize the NeuroPulse AI Status Epilepticus and Seizure Burden bedside software as a trigger.

Joe Schorre
Huntsville Memorial Hospital