At CES 2026 in Las Vegas, healthcare tech took a step toward something truly futuristic. Avatar Medical, together with Barco and Dell, unveiled its Eonis Vision system — a glasses-free 3D medical imaging display that aims to change how clinicians and patients view scans like CTs and MRIs.
Rather than relying on flat, grayscale images that are hard for most people to interpret, the Eonis Vision setup turns ordinary medical scans into intuitive, depth-rich visuals that look almost like the anatomy is right in front of you — all without VR headsets or goggles. This shared 3D view is designed to help patients truly see and understand their own medical images the way healthcare professionals do.
Avatar Medical’s booth in Eureka Park (Booth #60401) let CES attendees experience the technology firsthand. Visitors could stand in front of a medical-grade 3D display and watch familiar scans come to life with clear depth and detail. The goal is simple: make medical imaging more intuitive, reduce confusion, and help patients feel more confident in their care.
According to Avatar Medical, this kind of clarity matters because many adults struggle to understand conventional medical information — especially when it’s presented in technical ways. By showing anatomy in realistic 3D that feels natural rather than abstract, tools like Eonis Vision could help shift the patient-doctor conversation toward greater trust and better decisions.
The technology combines Avatar Medical’s software with Barco’s glasses-free 3D display and powerful Dell workstations accelerated by NVIDIA hardware for fast, interactive rendering. The bundled solution — which blends hardware and software — has already been named a CES Innovation Awards® 2026 Honoree in the Digital Healthcare category.
Currently, parts of the underlying Avatar Medical Vision software are FDA-cleared, and the company expects the newest version, compatible with the 3D display, to be commercially available after final regulatory clearance in Q2 2026.
In short, what Avatar Medical showed at CES wasn’t just another gadget — it was a peek at how future medical consultations might look: clearer, more human, and more empowering. Patients could walk away from their appointments not guessing what a scan means, but actually seeing it.