A day infusion unit at a rheumatology center in Shanghai was running biologic infusions — infliximab, rituximab, tocilizumab — for twenty patients a day. The protocol was standardized: pre-medication, primary infusion, post-infusion observation fluids, and a saline lock line. Four lines. The unit had IV poles — basic two-hook stands — that couldn’t handle the line count, and the infusion pumps sat on the floor next to the stands with cables crossing the walkway. Every Joint Commission survey flagged the same trip hazard, and every time they fixed it with tape that peeled up in a week. The ITT750 is the infusion trolley that integrates poles, pumps, and cable management into a single safe unit.
The AM-ITT750 is our four-pole infusion trolley — the midpoint of the ITT line, balancing capacity and maneuverability. Four telescoping poles provide sixteen hanging points, sufficient for the most common multi-drug protocols in general wards and day infusion units. The poles have the same reinforced four-hook tops as the ITT780, same stainless steel construction with locking collars, same three-kilogram-per-hook rating. For a typical post-operative or medical infusion regimen — primary fluids, antibiotic, electrolyte replacement, and a maintenance or rescue line — four poles cover the setup with capacity to spare.
The pump rack is standard on the ITT750 — not an optional accessory — and holds up to three volumetric infusion pumps or syringe drivers. The rack is the same design as the ITT780’s, mounted on the central column with integrated cable management. The difference is capacity: three pumps instead of four, because four-pole protocols typically use two to three electronic pumps and the remaining lines are gravity-fed. The power strip is integrated into the base, surge-protected, with a single cord to the wall outlet. The cable channel routes pump cords internally through the column — no external cable ties, no tape, no dangling wires.
The storage basket is the same two-tier design as the ITT780, with the removable upper tray for medication preparation and the clear-front lower basket for backup supplies. The basket dimensions are slightly smaller — roughly two-thirds the volume of the ITT780’s basket — reflecting the lower supply consumption of a day infusion unit compared to a dedicated chemotherapy bay. A fold-down side shelf on the rear of the trolley provides a temporary surface for charting or a tablet during infusion documentation.
The base is a rectangular steel plate, smaller than the ITT780’s but with the same reinforced corner gussets. Four casters at one hundred twenty-five millimeters, all locking, central release bar. The trolley is about fifty-eight centimeters wide — a deliberate compromise between stability (wider is more stable) and maneuverability (narrower fits through doorways and between recliners). In a day infusion unit with chairs spaced eighty centimeters apart, fifty-eight centimeters leaves enough clearance for a nurse to walk alongside the trolley rather than pushing it ahead and walking behind.
The ITT750 is the right choice for general medical and surgical wards, day infusion units, endoscopy recovery bays, and any clinical area where patients routinely have three to four IV lines and some of those lines are pump-controlled. It’s the most popular ITT model because it hits the crossover point between infusion complexity and trolley maneuverability. If your protocols are simpler and two poles suffice, the ITT600 and ITT650 are lighter and cheaper. If you’re running full chemotherapy protocols with five or six lines, the ITT780 is the correct upgrade. For the unit in the middle — complex enough for pumps, mobile enough to move between beds — the ITT750 is the balance. Send me your protocol sheet and I’ll confirm the pole count.