Back to GetFilings.com






UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K

(Mark One)
/X/ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1996.
or

/ / TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.
For the transition period from ____________ to ____________.

Commission File Number: 000-27956

PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Delaware 77-0238187
(State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. employer
incorporation or organization) identification no.)

Five Billerica Park,
101 Billerica Ave., N. Billerica, MA 01862
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (508) 670-2422

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: None

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:

Common Stock, $0.001 par value

(Title of class)

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant: (1) has filed all reports
required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such
filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes X No
--- ---

Indicate by check mark if disclosures of delinquent filers pursuant to Item
405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the
best of Registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this
Form 10-K. [ ]

The aggregate value of voting stock held by non-affiliates of the
Registrant was approximately $16,021,714 as of January 31, 1997, based upon the
average of the high and low prices of the Registrant's Common Stock reported for
such date on the Nasdaq National Market. Shares of Common Stock held by each
executive officer and director and by each person who owns 5% or more of the
outstanding Common Stock have been excluded in that such persons may be deemed
to be affiliates. The determination of affiliate status is not necessarily a
conclusive determination for other purposes. As of January 31, 1997, the
Registrant had outstanding 5,580,324 shares of Common Stock.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Certain information is incorporated into Part III of this report by
reference to the Proxy Statement for the Registrant's 1997 annual meeting of
stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to
Regulation 14A not later than 120 days after the end of the fiscal year covered
by this Form 10-K.



PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.

INDEX

PAGE
NUMBER
------

PART I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Item 1. BUSINESS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Item 2. PROPERTIES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20
Item 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20
Item 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS . . . . . .20

PART II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Item 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND
RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Item 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Item 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Item 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA . . . . . . . . . .25
Item 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON
ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

PART III . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26

Item 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT. . . . . . .26
Item 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26
Item 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT.27
Item 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS. . . . . . . . .27

PART IV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Item 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON
FORM 8-K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28


PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

INTRODUCTION

Physiometrix designs, develops, manufactures and markets noninvasive,
advanced medical products incorporating proprietary materials, electronics
technology and software for use in neurological monitoring applications during
surgical and diagnostic procedures. The Company sells its products to
hospitals, clinics and physicians' offices domestically and internationally.
The Company's initial products are its innovative e-Net headpiece and disposable
HydroDot biosensors, which are based upon the Company's proprietary HydroGel
technology, and its custom electronics. These products are packaged as the
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, which was developed and is sold for brain
monitoring applications, such as clinical electroencephalograph ("EEG")
procedures. The system is marketed and sold as a safer, lower cost alternative
to current EEG data collection technology. The system connects and interfaces
to the standard input on all conventional EEG instruments currently in use
worldwide, yet offers reduced patient setup time, more reliable data readings,
and enhanced patient comfort and safety. The Company has received a United
States Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") 510(k) clearance for the HydroDot
NeuroMonitoring System and the product was commercially introduced in August
1994.

The Company has completed the development of one and is continuing the
development of another NeuroMonitoring product which it believes will broaden
the Company's product base, offer new and enhanced system solutions, and
potentially increase the size for the NeuroMonitoring market. These products
are the Equinox EEG System which the Company commercially introduced in
February 1997 and the Patient State Analyzer which is in clinical trials.

EQUINOX EEG SYSTEM. The Equinox EEG System uses the Company's HydroDot
NeuroMonitoring System to collect EEG data and the NeuroLink, the Company's
data acquisition interface which utilizes a proprietary high speed
analog-to-digital converter to process the data. The Equinox EEG System
transmits the digitized EEG data to a standard personal computer for analysis
and networking by a proprietary fiber optic interface developed by the
Company. The combination of the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, the
NeuroLink, and the fiber optic interface is designed to provide health care
providers with a fully integrated EEG system at a lower cost, with enhanced
results and improved patient safety and comfort than the currently available
EEG instruments. The Company submitted a 510(k) application to the FDA in
June 1996 and received clearance of the application from the FDA in December
1996.

PATIENT STATE ANALYZER. The Patient State Analyzer is being developed
by the Company to provide a simplified, user friendly analysis of patient
brain activity during surgical procedures involving general anesthesia.
Currently, such monitoring is used only during about 3% of all such
procedures, primarily during high risk interventions such as cardiology and
neurology surgeries. At present, brain monitoring can only be accomplished
through traditional EEG techniques involving lengthy setups and the use of
flammable materials and cumbersome equipment. Traditional EEG devices also
require a neurologist to interpret their data output. As a result,
anesthesiologists are reluctant to use EEG monitoring during other surgical
procedures, despite the potential benefits offered by brain monitoring such
as improved patient safety, shorter patient recovery times, and lower overall
costs per procedure. The Patient State Analyzer will incorporate the
Company's HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, the NeuroLink, and the Equinox EEG
technology. In addition, the Company is developing the final component of
the Patient State Analyzer, a proprietary software module which will process
EEG data and provide an easy to read, "red light -- green light" signal to
anesthesiologists regarding patient's brain activity.

The Company believes that monitoring patients' brain activity during
surgery with the Patient State Analyzer will improve patient safety and lower
costs per surgical procedure by better controlling the amount of anesthesia
administered during surgeries. This will reduce the amount of postoperative
recovery time required, and eliminate the requirement of a neurologist or
specialized technologists to interpret EEG results during surgery. The
Company believes that these benefits create the opportunity for the Patient
State Analyzer to become the standard of care during all surgical
interventions using general anesthesia. The Company plans to submit a 510(k)
clearance application to the FDA for an initial version of the software
module component for the Patient State Analyzer in early 1997, and is working
with clinical investigators at several institutions, including Harvard
Medical School, in the development of the system.



The Company has developed additional neurology products utilizing the
Company's proprietary materials and electronics technology. For clinicians
desiring the benefits of the HydroDot biosensors but who do not wish to use the
e-Net because they prefer a procedure setup similar to that used with
conventional cup electrodes, the Company has developed the HydroSpot. The
HydroSpot is a hydrogelled disposable biosensor attached to a reusable lead wire
and will be offered as an alternative to the conventional cup electrodes
typically employed in EEG procedures. In addition to routine EEG procedures,
the HydroSpot has potential application for long term EEG monitoring and several
other applications including the evaluation of carpal tunnel syndrome.

The Company will not be able to market the Patient State Analyzer or other
potential products in the United States unless and until it obtains clearance or
approval from the FDA and there can be no assurance that the Company will obtain
FDA clearance for such products on a timely basis, if at all.

-2-



The table below summarizes the products currently offered by the Company,
the products under development by the Company, the markets served by these
products and their present development and/or commercialization status:




PRODUCT DESCRIPTION DEVELOPMENT/COMMERCIALIZATION STATUS
- ------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------

HYDROSPOT BIOSENSORS Disposable biosensors attached to lead wires Commercial sales

HYDRODOT NEUROMONITORING SYSTEM
- E-Net EEG headpiece Commercial sales

- Small E-Net EEG headpiece for children Commercial sales

- OR E-Net EEG headpiece for operating room applications Commercial sales
(designed for use with Patient State Analyzer)

- HydroDot biosensors Disposable biosensors for use with E-Nets Commercial sales


NEUROLINK Multichannel data acquisition interface between Commercial sales
the patient and EEG instrument; also incorporates
digital signal processing capability

EQUINOX EEG SYSTEM Complete EEG monitoring system (incorporates FDA clearance of 510(k) in
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System and proprietary Q4 1996
NeuroLink electronics)


PATIENT STATE ANALYZER Intraoperative EEG monitoring system (incorporates Under development
proprietary software under development, OR E-Net
and NeuroLink electronics)

EP SYSTEM

- SMARTSWITCH Electronic switching between RF ablation energy Available for commercial
and defibrillation energy during EP ablation sale; Company intends to
procedures seek marketing partner


- Multifunctional critical care electrode Combined RF grounding and defibrillation during Available for commercial
EP ablation procedures sale; Company intends to
seek marketing partner




-3-



INDUSTRY OVERVIEW

This Report on Form 10-K contains certain forward-looking statements within
the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Actual events or results may differ materially
from those projected in the forward-looking statements as a result of the
factors described herein and in the documents incorporated herein by reference.
Such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements
concerning (i) business strategy; (ii) products under development; (iii) other
products; (iv) marketing and distribution; (v) research and development; (vi)
manufacturing; (vii) competition; (viii) government regulation; (ix) third-party
reimbursement; and (x) operating and capital requirements.

EEG MARKET

An EEG procedure measures neurophysiological activity by measuring the
intensity and pattern of electrical signals generated by the brain. Undulations
in the recorded electrical signals are called brain waves, and the entire record
of electrical rhythms and other electrical activity (ongoing background signals
and event related transients) of the brain is an EEG. EEGs are widely used to
assist in the diagnosis of epilepsy, brain tumors, physiological disorders and
other brain abnormalities. Because the electrical waves produced by an injured
or abnormal brain will differ in predictable ways from waves produced by a
normal brain, an EEG exam should disclose and help diagnose brain abnormalities
and injuries.

Although EEG based brain monitoring has been performed for over 70 years,
it is only recently that medical professionals have begun to recognize the
benefits of EEGs as a broad based diagnostic tool. This should be contrasted
with the field of cardiac monitoring in which medical professionals have long
been aware of the benefits of such monitoring, and have integrated
electrocardiogram ("ECG") procedures into both preventive and diagnostic health
care. As a result, medical device and instrument companies have concentrated
on, and provided improved technology for, the cardiac monitoring market.
However, EEG technology has remained virtually unchanged since its inception.

Industry studies estimate that over 12 million EEG examinations are
performed worldwide annually. The Company believes that the annual market for
EEG devices, including replacement EEG instruments, electrodes and related
supplies, is approximately $125 million. The Company's HydroDot NeuroMonitoring
System and its components target this market.

In addition to this market, there are approximately 48 million surgical
interventions performed annually worldwide under general anesthesia,
representing a neuromonitoring market opportunity estimated in excess of $1
billion. The Company is developing the Patient State Analyzer to address this
market. Currently, anesthesiologists measure heart, breathing rates, as well as
other physiological changes, to monitor the effect of anesthesia on patients.
However, the brain, the organ which anesthetic drugs affect the earliest, is
generally not directly monitored. Nevertheless, in several types of surgical
procedures, including high risk cardiology and vascular surgical procedures,
brain monitoring is recognized by clinicians as particularly important. Routine
monitoring of brain functions during surgery can result in earlier detection of
abnormalities that, if left undetected, could result in serious surgical and
post surgical complications. Such monitoring can also potentially reduce costs
and postoperative recovery times by enabling a reduction in the amount of
anesthesia used during the surgical procedure, which would enable patients to
emerge from the effects of the anesthesia and be ambulatory more quickly
following the procedure. Today, such monitoring can only be accomplished
through the use of conventional EEG procedures, which require the use of
collodion, a flammable, toxic gel material, for attachment of electrodes as well
as cumbersome EEG equipment in the close confines of the operating room
environment. In addition, anesthesiologists are typically not familiar with
conventionally produced EEG test results, and a neurologist must therefore be on
hand to interpret EEG test information. The Company believes that the
availability of a low cost, easy to use monitoring device such as the Patient
State Analyzer could substantially increase brain monitoring during surgical
procedures involving general anesthesia.

CURRENT EEG PROCEDURE

Currently, to perform a typical EEG exam, the technician must measure,
mark, clean and abrade 20 spots on the scalp. After these procedures are
completed, 20 disc shaped electrodes are placed on the points identified on
the scalp. Collodion and a glue are typically used during this process.
Abrasion of the skin is necessary in order to provide a sufficiently low
impedance signal (typically less than 5,000 ohms) to the EEG monitor.
Electrodes can be misplaced, resulting in inaccurate readings, and

-4-



can fall off, necessitating that the technician restart the recording.
At the end of the procedure, cleanup of the collodion gel and glue used to
affix the electrodes to the scalp requires the use of toxic solvents and is
both time consuming and unpleasant for the patient. In addition, incomplete
sterilization of the cup electrodes can result in increased risk of infection
for the patient. These difficulties in patient setup and cleanup also
contribute to reduced operating efficiencies in the EEG laboratory. The
current method for performing EEGs also suffers from several functional
deficiencies, including difficulty in achieving effective electrical contact
between the patient and the device, the possibility of electrode movement or
displacement during the EEG examination, creation of salt bridges, or
unwanted electrical circuits between electrodes, that result in a high level
of EEG signal interference. The consequences of these deficiencies include
poor signal quality making diagnoses questionable, a need to administer
repeat tests and signal format that is not conducive to advanced diagnostic
analytical techniques. The Company believes that these deficiencies have
limited the growth of EEG monitoring.

A traditional EEG procedure takes an average of about 60 minutes, of which
about 30 minutes is made up of actual recording time. The traditional EEG is
extremely sensitive to patient movement, sweating, electrical interference and
muscle tension; any of these may make a tracing uninterpretable. For most of
the actual recording, the patient will lie calmly with their eyes closed.
Additional studies which most laboratories routinely perform include recording
during hyperventilation and photic simulation with a repetitive flash. For many
tracings, subjects are encouraged to fall asleep, if they can. Some
laboratories induce sleep with oral chloral hydrate.

In response to the inherent inadequacies of traditional methods for
performing EEGS, one manufacturer has introduced a device, which it calls
ElectroCap. This product uses an enclosed "bathing cap" type format, in which
the electrodes are encased in a headpiece that is much like a rubber bathing
cap. The Company believes the ElectroCap suffers from several disadvantages,
including the requirement for many different sized caps for different head
sizes, difficulty in placing electrodes because the technician cannot see the
electrode positioning due to the cap, and the closed design of the cap which is
uncomfortably hot and confining for the patient. In addition, to improve signal
quality, the patient's scalp must be aggressively abraded with a blunt needle
which is a painful, awkward and potentially infectious procedure.

THE PHYSIOMETRIX SOLUTION

The Physiometrix HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System has been developed to
address and seek to overcome the deficiencies of current methods of performing
EEGS. The HydroDot System incorporates innovative product features that improve
clinical efficacy, patient comfort and allow the EEG laboratory to perform EEG
procedures more efficiently. Physiometrix' E-Net is a proprietary, flexible,
open net matrix that fits over the patient's head and uses disposable, soft
hydrogel biosensors that are inserted into the matrix at predetermined locations
that correspond to points on the scalp where conventional cup electrodes would
otherwise be affixed manually. In effect, the E-Net serves as a template to
automatically position the HydroDot biosensors for the EEG procedure. The E-Net
fits a majority of adult head sizes. The elasticity of the E-Net ensures
accurate placement of the HydroDot biosensors and the maintenance of
proportionality between electrodes. The Company also sells a smaller version of
the E-Net which, together with the adult sized E-Net, enables over 95% of head
sizes to be accommodated. The proprietary hydrogel electrode material is
adhesive, but does not leave a residue. In contrast to conventional EEG
methods, time consuming and often painful scalp preparation is not required to
achieve a low impedance signal. The hair is simply parted and the HydroDot
biosensors are pressed into the sockets on the E-Net. For testing environments
in which there is the potential for hostile electrical interference, the E-Net
can connect to an adjacent analog to digital interface module that digitizes the
electrode signal, transmits the digital data via a fiber optic link to the
instrument location, where it is converted back into an analog form acceptable
to the EEG input electronics. This data transmission procedure virtually
eliminates ambient noise that is present in most EEGs (especially electronic
noise in the intensive care unit, operating room and emergency room) as a result
of the "antennae" effect from using wire leads to transmit electrical data, and
can be used with any EEG instrument.

The E-Net reduces average EEG setup times by approximately 75 percent (6
to 8 minutes versus 30 minutes), in addition to providing a high quality and
accurate signal. The HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System offers the following
advantages over traditional modalities:

- Electrode positioning is fast, easy, accurate and reproducible;
time consuming measurements are avoided.

- Patient preparation time is greatly reduced and the use of toxic,
flammable substances is avoided.

-5-



- Patient comfort is enhanced because patients can move around
untethered; the open E-Net structure provides ventilation and the
patient is not encumbered by a large number of wires.

- Adhesive qualities of the hydrogel provide excellent skin contact
without slippage, eliminate salt bridges and prevent electrodes from
falling off the scalp.

- Biosensors ensure reproducible signal quality and minimize collection
of electrical interference from the environment.

- Risk of infection is reduced through the use of disposable biosensors
and reduced need for scalp abrasion.

The Company believes that the Equinox EEG System and the Patient State
Analyzer, will enable it to offer new and enhanced system solutions for the
neurology monitoring market. The Equinox EEG System could significantly
increase the number of neurologists performing EEGs by reducing the capital
costs involved in EEG monitoring. Currently, only approximately one-third of
the nearly 10,000 neurologists in the United States perform EEGs due in large
part to the capital costs associated with EEG devices.

The Company believes that the availability of a low-cost, easy to use
monitoring device such as the Patient State Analyzer, could substantially
increase brain monitoring during surgery and has the potential to become the
standard of care in brain monitoring during administration of general
anesthesia.

BUSINESS STRATEGY

The Company's objective is to become the leader in the design, development
and commercialization of brain monitoring technology. Key elements of the
Company's strategy including the following:

- DESIGN AND DEVELOP INNOVATIVE, PROPRIETARY PRODUCTS FOR THE NEUROLOGY
MARKET. Physiometrix plans to capitalize on the growing recognition
among medical professionals of EEG monitoring as a diagnostic tool and
the need for a low-cost, easy to use and reliable method of brain
monitoring. The Company intends to remain focused on the development
and marketing of products for neurology, including products that are
designed to expand the use of neurological monitoring. The Company
has substantial design and development expertise in the neurological
monitoring field and will seek to position itself at the forefront of
innovation in this industry.

- DIVERSIFY PRODUCT OFFERINGS TO INCREASE MARKET PENETRATION. The
Company seeks to offer a range of products, including hardware and
disposable products designed to simplify EEG procedures and encourage
broader use of EEG monitoring. The Company believes that it will be
able to significantly expand its penetration of the neurology market
with the Equinox EEG System and through the introduction of the
Patient State Analyzer.

- BROADEN MARKETING CHANNELS. The Company will seek to implement a
broad based marketing strategy, using direct sales personnel and
distributors in the United States and distributors and others
internationally. The Company's current products are also being
marketed through several neurology monitoring companies. In addition,
the Company will need to hire and develop a sales force to market the
Patient State Analyzer to anesthesiologists, hospital administrators,
and, to a lesser extent, managed care centers.

- OUTSOURCE MANUFACTURING TO CONTROL COSTS. The Company will seek to
outsource many manufacturing processes to qualified contract
manufacturers to control costs, maintain quality and reduce capital
investment, while retaining control over key proprietary processes for
certain components of its products.

- BUILD VALUE THROUGH SALE OF NONCORE PRODUCTS. For products with
applications outside neurology, the Company intends to pursue a
strategy of licensing or selling such products to companies focused in
relevant

-6-



target markets. The Company intends to implement this
element of its strategy for its products with applications in the
electrophysiology field.

PRODUCTS AND TECHNOLOGY

CURRENT PRODUCTS

E-Net. The E-Net is an open handed headpiece designed to position and hold
the HydroDot disposable biosensors symmetrically against the scalp during an EEG
study. The E-Net is manufactured from a proprietary elastic material and
positions 20 biosensors according to the internationally recognized 10-20 System
on head sizes varying from 48 to 62 centimeters in circumference. The 10-20
System is a standard, universal methodology for marking and measuring the
patient's scalp for electrode placement in EEG procedures.

The E-Net is held in place by adjustable straps, one at the back of the
neck and the other around the chin. These strap positions minimize interaction
between head motion and electrode position. The open handed design of the E-Net
allows access to the scalp for parting the hair and for placing additional
biosensors on the patient. The expandable, shielded wire leads on the outside
of the E-Net are combined into a single connector that interfaces to the
straight cable. The E-Net is reusable with an expected lifetime of up to 200
applications. The elastic material is shielded by a fabric sheath and the wires
are covered in a protective jacket and ultrasonically welded to the biosensor
sockets. The disposable biosensors snap out of the E-Net after it is removed
and the entire E-Net may be sterilized in disinfectant solution. Its key
competitive features are elastic proportionality, increased patient comfort,
standardized placement of biosensors, elimination of measurements, open handed
design, integrated wiring, and durability. The E-Net is currently sold
separately for $250.00 or as a starter kit with a half case of HydroDot
biosensors (enough for approximately 10 EEG procedures) and a straight cable for
connection to EEG machines for $495.00.

Small E-Net. Because the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System is much less
traumatic to patients than traditional EEG procedures, it is much easier to use
on children. Physiometrix' small E-Net, introduced in March 1995, enables
technicians to use the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System on children.

OR E-NET. The Company has developed the OR E-Net, which is specially
designed so that it can be used during surgical procedures in which blood flow
to the brain could be compromised. Typically, hospitals have had to rely on
collodion as an adhesive for their operating room procedures to secure the metal
cup electrodes. Many institutions have banned collodion from operating room use
because it is highly flammable. As a result, the Company believes that the
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System can potentially replace many products currently
available for such uses. The Company plans to offer the OR E-Net as a component
of the Patient State Analyzer.

HYDRODOT DISPOSABLE BIOSENSORS. The HydroDot biosensors are disposable and
are used in lieu of conventional cup electrodes to acquire EEG signals from a
patient. The biosensors are packaged in ready-to-use sealed trays of 24
sensors. Minimal skin preparation and no collodion is required when the sensors
are inserted into the sockets on the E-Net. When the E-Net is removed after
completion of an EEG examination, the sensors leave no residue on the scalp.
The HydroDot biosensors provide high signal quality through the incorporation of
a silver/silver chloride reference and an adhesive proprietary hydrogel material
that conforms to the scalp. Because the HydroDot biosensors are disposable,
they can be used on patients with contagious diseases and discarded, thereby
reducing the risk of spreading infectious disease. Their key competitive
features are ease of use, reduced risk of infection, cleanliness, improved
signal quality and increased safety. The HydroDot biosensors are sold in
20-tray cases for $180.00.

NEUROLINK. The NeuroLink is a cost effective "front end" link from the
patient to the EEG machine and is integrated into both the Equinox EEG System
and the Patient State Analyzer. The NeuroLink is an optically isolated,
instrumentation grade, 32 channel data acquisition system that provides a quick
interface capability to the Company's E-Net. The NeuroLink allows the physician
or EEG technician to check calibration and individual electrode impedances
immediately upon preparation of the patient for the EEG procedure. Because the
NeuroLink incorporates a fiber optic link between the patient and the EEG
instrument, recordings are free from 60 hertz interference, a particular problem
in operating rooms and other critical care settings.

-7-



HYDROSPOT. The Company has developed the HydroSpot biosensor for those
technicians who want the benefits of the HydroDot biosensors, but do not wish to
use the E-Net because they prefer a procedure setup similar to that used with
conventional cup electrodes. The HydroSpot is a hydrogelled disposable
biosensor attached to a reusable lead wire and will be offered as an alternative
to the conventional cup electrodes typically employed in EEG procedures. In
addition to routine EEG procedures, the HydroSpot has potential application for
long term EEG monitoring and several other applications including evoked
potentials and nerve conduction velocity studies which are often used in
evaluation of carpal tunnel syndrome patients.

The HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System represents a new method for EEG
monitoring, and market acceptance of the system will be dependent upon, among
other things, the willingness of physicians, EEG technicians and others to adopt
use of this new system. Market acceptance will also be dependent upon the
Company's ability to convince potential users of the system of its anticipated
cost and efficacy advantages. In addition, the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System
may not be suitable for patients that have experienced severe head trauma
because the physician may not wish to surround the patient's head with the E-
Net. However, the Company's HydroSpot biosensors, which do not require use of
the eNet, could be used for such patients. To date, the Company has shipped
only a small number of HydroDot NeuroMonitoring Systems.

EQUINOX EEG SYSTEM. The HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System together with the
NeuroLink provides the EEG data acquisition front end link to a standard
personal computer. Physiometrix has developed a low cost general purpose
digital EEG platform with software and hardware optimized for both desktop and
portable systems utilizing the Company's EEG signal acquisition technology. The
Equinox EEG System is offered at a price significantly lower than currently
available EEG instruments. The Company believes that the Equinox EEG System's
portability will facilitate greater EEG access to remote areas both domestically
and internationally. The incorporation of personal computer technology allows
networking, analysis and transmission of EEG data.

PRODUCTS UNDER DEVELOPMENT

PATIENT STATE ANALYZER. Physiometrix is developing the Patient State
Analyzer ("PSA") for brain monitoring in the operating room. The PSA is
expected to utilize 10 to 12 biosensors to record EEG for continuous analysis by
the PSA. The PSA is being designed to extract data known to be sensitive to the
functional level of each region of the brain, the adequacy of blood supply and
the interaction of each region with neighboring regions on the opposite side of
the brain. Based on such measurements, statistical procedures will be used to
deliver an analysis of the data into a measurement called a "self-norm," to
provide a base for monitoring the effects of anesthesia.

The PSA will record "self-norms" both prior to and immediately after the
administration of anesthesia. During intraoperative procedures, the PSA will
constantly monitor data and its relationship to those two endpoints and alert
the anesthesiologist as to changes in the patient's state of consciousness. The
PSA will provide the anesthesiologist with a "red light -- green light" readout
regarding the patient's ideal anesthetized state. Normal neurological function
for the patient will be determined by recording a brief EEG immediately prior to
anesthesia and a subsequent brief EEG as soon as the patient has reached an
optimal anesthetized state.

The PSA will consist of the Company's Equinox EEG hardware with an OR E-Net
in place of the standard E-Net and an 8 channel preamplifier input. Software
will include testing electrode impedance, amplifier calibration, EEG collection,
quantitative analysis after artifact removal (brain wave abnormalities resulting
from external stimulation, eye blinking or muscle movement), display and
storage. The capability to construct group norms for a particular procedure
will be provided, so the user can build criteria for the typical patient.

The Company expects that the PSA will be developed in two phases. The
first phase will include the development and implementation of proprietary
software for displaying changes in the patient's level of consciousness. The
development system platform will consist of a standard personal computer and a
NeuroLink fiber optic interface card. The second phase will consist of trials
seeking to validate the effectiveness and safety of the PSA during operating
conditions using six different anesthetic agents. Each agent will be evaluated
in 20 cases. The software is planned for development in a modular fashion. The
Company expects that it will include a data acquisition module, signal
processing module, artifact removal module, signal analysis module, a data
storage module and a user interface module. By developing a system software
specification defining the use of software modules, development time and cost
for new Physiometrix products is expected to be reduced.

-8-



The Patient State Analyzer represents a new approach for brain monitoring
during surgery. Market acceptance of this product will be dependent upon, among
other things, the willingness of physicians, EEG technicians and others to adopt
use of these products. Market acceptance will also be dependent upon the
Company's ability to convince potential users of this product of its cost and
efficacy advantages.

OTHER PRODUCTS

The core technologies developed by Physiometrix are also applicable to
other additional medical applications, particularly the electrophysiology
segment of the cardiology market. Electrophysiology laboratory procedures to
analyze patient's arrhythmic events and to map and ablate cardiac arrhythmias
represent a rapidly growing segment in cardiology. Industry sources have
forecast significant growth in these procedures over the next several years. To
analyze a patient's arrhythmic events in electrophysiology procedures, the
patient undergoes a procedure designed to replicate an arrhythmic event in a
controlled laboratory setting. In mapping and ablation procedures, cardiac
arrhythmias are mapped and ablated with a catheter that delivers radio frequency
("RF") energy to the site of the arrhythmia. For electrophysiology
applications, the Company has developed its EP System which is comprised of two
components, the SmartSwitch switching box and a pair of multifunctional critical
care electrode.

SMARTSWITCH. The Smart Switch switching box component of the EP System
senses RF energy return and automatically channels RF energy accordingly,
permitting the use of one or two electrodes for RF return. The SmartSwitch also
provides for direct switching between RF energy and defibrillation energy during
the procedure, which enables the electrophysiologist to respond quickly and
deliver a defibrillation shock in the event that the patient's heart experiences
fibrillation during the procedure. Standby defibrillation capability is
required in cardiac ablation procedures.

MULTIFUNCTIONAL CRITICAL CARE ELECTRODE. In most electrophysiology labs,
standard practice is for all patients to be "prepadded" with disposable
defibrillation electrodes. With the increasing use of cardiac ablation as a
therapeutic procedure for treatment of arrhythmias, there is a need for this
electrode to also serve as an RF energy return electrode. The Physiometrix EP
System allows one electrode to serve both functions by simply alternating
between both defibrillation and RF return. The multifunctional electrodes can
be purchased as part of the EP System and are also sold separately.

Physiometrix believes that the benefits of the EP System can afford
clinical advantages to electrophysiologists and that a significant market
opportunity exists due to anticipated increases in the number of cardiac
ablation procedures. Because this system is outside the Company's core area of
focus in the neurology field, the Company intends to seek to market and support
the EP System through a partnering arrangement with a company focused on the
electrophysiology market. There can be no assurance that the Company will be
able to secure a suitable partner and that any such partner, if secured, will be
able to successfully market and sell the Company's electrophysiology products.

MARKETING AND DISTRIBUTION

The Company's initial sales and marketing strategy is to focus on
neurologists in the United States and in other markets targeted by the Company.
In the United States, there are approximately 10,000 neurologists, and industry
studies estimate that over 6 million EEG examinations are performed in the
United States annually, with approximately 80 percent of these procedures being
performed in approximately 3,650 high volume clinics. The Company seeks to
emphasize to neurologists and neurological technicians the cost saving potential
of the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System. A cost justification analysis performed
at a leading children's hospital indicated that use of the HydroDot
NeuroMonitoring System provided measurable time and cost savings and resulted in
the adoption of the HydroDot System at the hospital at which the study was
performed.

Physiometrix currently employs a small direct sales force in the United
States and emphasizes product training with the goal of expanding adoption of
the HydroDot System. In addition, the system is being actively promoted by two
leading manufacturers of EEG machines; Nicolet Biomedical, Inc. ("Nicolet") and
Medelec Inc., also known as TECA Corp. ("TECA"). The Company has begun an active
program to train the sales organizations of its marketing partners. This
includes field training of sales, service and applications staffs as well as in
house training of telemarketing and customer support personnel. Both Nicolet
and TECA have agreed to undertake sales promotions with the goal of expanding
interest in the HydroDot System.

-9-



The Company intends, in connection with the planned commercial introduction
of the Patient State Analyzer, to increase its sales force to market the Patient
State Analyzer to hospitals, anesthesiologists and other potential users of such
system.

The Company is also pursuing sales opportunities to original equipment
manufacturers ("OEMs"). Physiometrix sells to OEMs interchangeable modules
designed to provide signal acquisition, analysis and to display a variety of
important patient parameters. As an example, the Company has sold a number of
NeuroLink electronics packages to OEM customers for inclusion in their EEG
machines. Neuro Concepts, Inc. and TECA each accounted for 12 percent each of
the Company's revenues during the year ended December 1996. No other customer
has accounted for 10 percent or more of the Company's annual revenues.

Because the Company has only recently reached product commercialization,
Physiometrix has to date focused its sales effort domestically. The Company
anticipates utilizing OEM partners and specialty medical device distributors for
international sales and has commenced shipments to major European markets
through sales made to international distributors in 1996.

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

Physiometrix research and development activities are performed by the
Company's internal research and development staff, whose activities are
augmented by the use of outside consultants for particular projects and areas of
specialization. The Company has retained consultants for hardware and software
design and clinical evaluation and development of the Patient State Analyzer.
The Company's future research and development efforts are expected to be focused
on completion of development of the Patient State Analyzer, improving its
existing products as well as development of new products for the neurology
market.

Research and development expenses for the years ended December 31, 1994,
1995 and 1996 were $741,068, $392,413, and $1,189,336, respectively, none of
which was customer funded.

MANUFACTURING

The Company manufactures its products at its facilities in North Billerica,
Massachusetts. Production occurs in approximately 5,000 square feet of space
utilizing standard production equipment for most processes and proprietary
equipment for several specialized operations. The Company's production area
includes a segregated area where temperature can be controlled and maintained
for the production of the HydroDot biosensors. The Company intends to increase
outsourcing of manufacturing to contract manufacturers for certain components in
order to reduce cost and capital requirements and improve quality, while
retaining control over certain proprietary manufacturing processes.

The Company manufactures its products in conformance with FDA's GMPs, and
intends to comply with ISO 9001 standards when required in order to continue to
produce products for sale in Europe. Any failure by the Company to remain in
compliance with the GMPs or comply with ISO 9001 standards could have a material
adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of
operation.

The Company purchases components from various suppliers and relies on
single sources for several parts. To date, the Company has not experienced any
significant adverse affects resulting from shortages of components. Delays
associated with any future part shortages, particularly as the Company scales up
its manufacturing activities, would have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

The Company currently manufactures its HydroDot NeuroMonitoring Systems and
NeuroLink and Equinox in limited quantities. The Company does not have
experience in manufacturing its products in commercial quantities.
Manufacturers often encounter difficulties in scaling up production of products,
including problems involving production yields, quality control and assurance,
component supply and lack of qualified personnel. Difficulties encountered by
the Company in scaling up manufacturing could have a material adverse effect on
its business, financial condition and results of operations.

-10-



COMPETITION

Competition in the market for neurological monitoring devices is intense
and may increase. The Company's products compete against conventional EEG
monitoring devices and related EEG monitoring products. Traditional EEG
electrodes are manufactured by a variety of companies. Nicolet, Nihon Kohden
America, Inc. and TECA are leading providers of EEG supplies through their
respective catalogs. Many of the Company's competitors have substantially
greater name recognition and financial resources than the Company and also have
greater resources and expertise in the areas of research and development,
obtaining regulatory approvals, manufacturing, marketing and sales. There can
be no assurance that the Company's competitors will not succeed in developing
and marketing products and technologies that are more effective than those
developed and marketed by the Company or that would render the Company's
products and technologies obsolete or noncompetitive. Additionally, there can
be no assurance that the Company will be able to compete effectively against its
competitors in the areas of manufacturing, marketing and sales.

The Company believes that the primary competitive factors in the market for
neurological monitoring devices are the ability to provide products that can
improve clinical efficacy, reduce patient setup time, and contribute to
improvement of laboratory operating efficiencies. The Company believes that the
innovations it has developed in the field of neurology monitoring can
potentially afford it a competitive advantage.

The Company commercially introduced the Equinox EEG System in February 1997
and anticipates that, due to the number of companies competing for sales of EEG
machines, the Company will encounter increased price competition. Several of
the Company's competitors are offering EEG systems with limited capabilities at
sale prices below those of full featured EEG instruments, and other competitors
are also developing their own low cost systems. Accordingly, the Company may be
subject to increased price competition as well as other competitive factors in
the future.

PATENTS AND PROPRIETARY RIGHTS

The Company's policy is to protect is proprietary position by, among other
methods, filing United States and foreign patent applications to protect
technology, inventions and improvements that are important to its business. The
Company has nine issued United States patents and four United States patent
applications pending in the areas of biosensor material compositions, electrode
configurations, diagnostic systems and system-to-instrument data links.

The patent positions of medical device companies, including those of the
Company, are uncertain and involve complex and evolving legal and factual
questions. The coverage sought in a patent application either can be denied or
significantly reduced before or after the patent is issued. Consequently, there
can be no assurance that any patent applications will result in the issuance of
patents, or that the Company's issued or any future patents will provide
significant protection or commercial advantage or will not be circumvented by
others. Since patent applications are secret until patents are issued in the
United States or corresponding applications are published in international
countries, and since publication of discoveries in the scientific or patent
literature often lags behind actual discoveries, the Company cannot be certain
that it was the first to make the inventions covered by each of its pending
patent applications or that it was the first to file patent applications for
such inventions. There can be no assurance that patents held by or licensed to
the Company or any patents that may be issued as a result of the Company's
pending or future patent applications will be of commercial benefit, afford the
Company adequate protection from competing products or technologies or will not
be challenged by competitors or others or declared invalid. Also, there can be
no assurance that the Company will have the financial resources to defend its
patents from infringement or claims of invalidity.

In the event a third party has also filed a patent application relating to
an invention claimed in a Company patent application, the Company may be
required to participate in an interference proceeding declared by the United
States Patent and Trademark Office ("US PTO") to determine priority of
invention, which could result in substantial uncertainties and costs to the
Company, even if the eventual outcome is favorable to the Company. There can be
no assurance that any patents issued to the Company would be held valid by a
court of competent jurisdiction.

The Company relies upon trade secret protection for certain unpatented
aspects of other proprietary technology. There is no assurance that others will
not independently develop or otherwise acquire substantially equivalent
proprietary information

-11-



or techniques, others will not otherwise gain access to the Company's
proprietary technology or disclose such technology, or the Company can
meaningfully protect its trade secrets.

The Company typically requires its employees and consultants to execute
appropriate confidentiality and proprietary information agreements upon the
commencement of employment or consulting relationship with the Company. These
agreements generally provide that all confidential information developed or made
known to the individual by the Company during the course of the individual's
relationship with the Company, is to be kept confidential and not disclosed to
third parties, except in specific circumstances. The agreements generally
provide that all inventions conceived by the individual in the course of
rendering services to the Company shall be the exclusive property of the
Company; however, certain of the Company's agreements with consultants, who
typically are employed on a full time basis by academic institutions or
hospitals, do not contain assignment of invention provisions. There can be no
assurance, however, that these agreements will provide meaningful protection or
adequate remedies for the Company in the event of unauthorized use, transfer or
disclosure of such information or inventions.

GOVERNMENT REGULATION

UNITED STATES

The Company's HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System (including its family of E-
Nets, and HydroDot biosensors, HydroSpot, Equinox EEG System, Patient State
Analyzer and other potential products are and will be regulated in the United
States as medical devices by the FDA under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act ("FDC Act") and require premarket clearance or approval by the FDA prior to
commercialization. In addition, certain material changes or modifications to
medical devices also are subject to FDA review and clearance or approval.
Pursuant to the FDC Act, the FDA regulates the research, testing, manufacture,
safety, labeling, storage, record keeping, advertising, distribution and
production of medical devices in the United States. Noncompliance with
applicable requirements can result in warning letters, fines, injunctions, civil
penalties, recall or seizure of products, total or partial suspension of
production, failure of the government to grant premarket clearance or premarket
approval for devices, and criminal prosecution. Medical devices are classified
into one of three classes, Class I, II or III, on the basis of the controls
deemed by FDA to be necessary to reasonably ensure their safety and
effectiveness. Class I devices are subject to general controls (E.G., labeling,
premarket notification and adherence to Good Manufacturing Practices ("GMP").
Class II devices are subject to general controls and to special controls (E.G.,
performance standards, postmarket surveillance, patient registries, and FDA
guidelines). Generally, Class III devices are those which must receive
premarket approval by the FDA to ensure their safety and effectiveness (E.G.,
life sustaining, life supporting and implantable devices, or new devices which
have not been found substantially equivalent to legally marketed devices), and
require clinical testing to ensure safety and effectiveness and FDA approval
prior to marketing and distribution. FDA also has the authority to require
clinical testing of Class I and Class II devices. A premarket approval ("PMA")
application must be filed if the proposed device is not substantially equivalent
to a legally marketed predicate device or if it is a Class II device for which
FDA has called for such applications.

If human clinical trials of a device are required and if the device
presents a "significant risk," the manufacturer or the distributor of the device
is required to file an investigational device exemption ("IDE") application
prior to commencing human clinical trials. The IDE application must be
supported by data, typically including the results of animal and, possibly,
mechanical testing. If the IDE application is approved by FDA, human clinical
trials may begin at a specific number of investigational sites with a maximum
number of patients, as approved by the agency. Sponsors of clinical trials are
permitted to sell those devices distributed in the course of the study provided
such costs do not exceed recovery of the costs of manufacture, research,
development and handling. The clinical trials must be conducted under the
auspices of an independent institutional review board ("IRB") established
pursuant to FDA regulations.

Generally, before a new device can be introduced into the market in the
United States, the manufacturer or distributor must obtain FDA clearance of a
510(k) notification or approval of a PMA application. If a medical device
manufacturer or distributor can establish that a device is "substantially
equivalent" to a legally marketed Class I or Class II device, or to a Class II
device for which FDA has not called for PMAs, the manufacturer or distributor
may seek clearance from FDA to market the device by filing a 510(K)
notification. The 510(k) notification may need to be supported by appropriate
data establishing the claim of substantial equivalence to the satisfaction of
FDA. FDA recently has been requiring a more rigorous demonstration of
substantial equivalence.

-12-



Following submission of the 510(k) notification, the manufacturer or
distributor may not place the device into commercial distribution until an order
is issued by FDA. No law or regulation specifies the time limit by which FDA
must respond to a 510(k) notification. At this time, FDA typically responds to
the submission of a 510(k) notification within 150 to 200 days. An FDA order
may declare that the device is substantially equivalent to another legally
marketed device and allow the proposed device to be marketed in the United
States. FDA, however, may determine that the proposed device is not
substantially equivalent or require further information, including clinical
data, to make a determination regarding substantial equivalence. Such
determination or request for additional information could delay market
introduction of the products that are the subject of the 510(k) notification.

If a manufacturer or distributor of medical devices cannot establish that a
proposed device is substantially equivalent to a legally marketed device, the
manufacturer or distributor must seek premarket approval of the proposed device
through submission of a PMA application. A PMA application must be supported by
extensive data, including preclinical and clinical trial data, as well as
extensive literature to prove the safety and effectiveness of the device.
Following receipt of a PMA application, if FDA determines that the application
is sufficiently complete to permit a substantive review, FDA will "file" the
application. Under the FDC Act, FDA has 180 days to review a PMA application,
although the review of such an application more often occurs over a protracted
time period, and generally takes approximately two years or more from the date
of filing to complete.

The PMA application approval process can be expensive, uncertain and
lengthy. A number of devices for which premarket approval has been sought have
never been approved for marketing. The review time is often significantly
extended by FDA, which may require more information or clarification of
information already provided in the submission. During the review period, an
advisory committee likely will be convened to review and evaluate the
application and provide recommendations to FDA as to whether the device should
be approved. In addition, FDA will inspect the manufacturing facility to ensure
compliance with FDA's GMP requirements prior to approval of an application. If
granted, the approval of the PMA application may include significant limitations
on the indicated uses for which a product may be marketed.

The Company received clearance of 510(k) premarket notification from the
FDA to market the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, HydroSpot and Equinox EEG
System for EEG monitoring and the EP System for certain external defibrillation
applications and RF return during electrosurgical procedures where a combination
of defibrillation and RF return indications is required. The Company believes
that the Patient State Analyzer and other potential products currently under
development will be subject to FDA clearance by 510(k) notification, however,
the FDA may require the Company to submit a PMA application for such products.
There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to obtain necessary
510(k) clearance or PMA application approval to market the Patient State
Analyzer or any other products, on a timely basis, if at all, and delays in
receipt or failure to receive such clearances or approvals, the loss of
previously received clearances or approvals, or failure to comply with existing
or future regulatory requirements could have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

The Company is also required to register as a medical device manufacturer
with the FDA and state agencies and to list its products with the FDA. As such,
the Company will be inspected by both FDA and state agencies for compliance with
the FDA's GMP and other applicable regulations. These regulations require that
the Company manufacture its products and maintain its documents in a prescribed
manner with respect to manufacturing, testing and control activities. Further,
the Company is required to comply with various FDA requirements for design,
safety, advertising and labeling. The Company has not yet undergone an FDA GMP
inspection.

The Company is required to provide information to the FDA on death or
serious injuries alleged to have been associated with the use of its medical
devices, as well as product malfunctions that would likely cause or contribute
to death or serious injury if the malfunction were to recur. In addition, the
FDA prohibits an approved device from being marketed for unapproved
applications. If the FDA believes that a company is not in compliance with the
law, it can institute proceedings to detain or seize products, issue a recall,
enjoin future violations and assess civil and criminal penalties against the
company, its officers and its employees. Failure to comply with the regulatory
requirements could have a material adverse effect on the Company's business,
financial condition and results of operations.

-13-



The advertising of most FDA regulated products is subject to both FDA and
Federal Trade Commission jurisdiction. The Company also is subject to
regulation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and by other
governmental entities.

Regulations regarding the manufacture and sale of the Company's products
are subject to change. The Company cannot predict what impact, if any, such
changes might have on its business, financial condition or results of
operations.

INTERNATIONAL

International sales of the Company's products are subject to the regulatory
agency product registration requirements of each country. The regulatory review
process varies from country to country. The Company has relied on its
international distributors to obtain necessary foreign regulatory approvals for
sales of its products overseas. The Company also intends to seek any necessary
additional regulatory approvals in certain European countries and in Japan in
connection with future marketing and sales efforts in these countries. The
Company anticipates that it will rely on OEM partners and distributors for
assistance in obtaining any future international regulatory approvals. There
can be no assurance, however, that the Company will secure additional
international OEM partners or distributors or that international regulatory
approvals, if sought, will be obtained on a timely basis or at all.

In connection with future sales in the European market, the Company
anticipates that it will implement policies and procedures which will allow the
Company's manufacturing and quality assurance processes to receive ISO 9001
certification. ISO 9001 standards for quality operations have been developed to
ensure that companies know, on a worldwide basis, the standards of quality to
which they will be held. The European Union has promulgated rules which require
that medical products receive by mid 1998 the CE mark, an international symbol
of quality and compliance with applicable European medical device directives.
Failure to receive CE mark certification will prohibit the Company from selling
its products in Europe. There can be no assurance that the Company will be
successful in meeting certification requirements. ISO 9001 certification is one
of the CE mark certification requirements.

THIRD PARTY REIMBURSEMENT

In the United States, health care providers, such as hospitals and
physicians, that purchase medical devices such as the Company's products,
generally rely on third party payors, principally federal Medicare, state
Medicaid and private health insurance plans, to reimburse all or part of the
cost of therapeutic and diagnostic catheterization procedures. Reimbursement
for neurophysiological monitoring procedures performed using devices that have
received FDA clearance or approval has generally been available in the United
States. The Company anticipates that in a capitated payment system, such as the
DRG system utilized by Medicare and many managed care systems used by private
health care payors , the cost of the Company's products will be incorporated
into the overall cost of the procedure and that there will be no separate,
additional reimbursement for the Company's products.

Internationally, future market acceptance of the Company's products may be
dependent in part upon the availability of reimbursement within prevailing
health care payment systems. Reimbursement and health care payment systems in
international markets vary significantly by country. The main types of health
care payment systems in international markets are government sponsored health
care and private insurance. There can, however, be no assurance that
reimbursement for procedures performed using the Company's products will be
available in international markets under either governmental or private
reimbursement systems.

The Company could be adversely affected by changes in reimbursement
policies of governmental or private health care payors, particularly to the
extent any such changes affect reimbursement for procedures in which the
Company's products are used. Failure by physicians, hospitals and other users
of the Company's products to obtain sufficient reimbursement from health care
payors for procedures in which the Company's products are used, or adverse
changes in governmental and private third party payors' policies toward
reimbursement for such procedures, would have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

-14-



PRODUCT LIABILITY AND INSURANCE

The Company's business involves the risk of product liability claims. The
Company has not experienced any product liability claims to date. Although the
Company maintains product liability insurance with coverage limits of $2 million
per occurrence and an annual aggregate maximum of $3 million, there can be no
assurance that product liability claims will not exceed such insurance coverage
limits, which could have a material adverse effect on the Company, or that such
insurance will be available on commercially reasonable terms or at all.

EMPLOYEES

As of December 31, 1996, the Company had 31 full time employees. Six
persons were engaged in research and development activities, eight persons were
engaged in manufacturing and manufacturing engineering, three persons were
engaged in quality assurance and regulatory affairs, nine persons were engaged
in sales and marketing and five persons were engaged in general and
administrative functions. No employees are covered by collective bargaining
agreements, and the Company believes it maintains good relations with its
employees.

ADDITIONAL RISK FACTORS

DEPENDENCE UPON HYDRODOT NEUROMONITORING SYSTEM, EQUINOX EEG SYSTEM AND
FUTURE PRODUCTS. The Company received 510(k) premarket notification clearance
from the FDA in October 1993 to market the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System and
in December 1996 to market the Equinox EEG System. The HydroDot NeuroMonitoring
System is currently the Company's principal commercial product and is expected
to account for most of the Company's revenue through 1997. The Company
commercially introduced the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System in August 1994 and
the Equinox EEG System in February 1997. There can be no assurance that the
Company will be able to manufacture these products in commercial quantities at
acceptable costs, or that it will be able to market such systems successfully.
Increases in international sales of these products will require the Company to
obtain foreign regulatory approvals and secure "OEM" partners or establish
foreign distribution capability. If these products are not commercially
successful, the Company's business, financial condition and results of
operations would be materially adversely affected.

The Company is developing the Patient State Analyzer, which will require
further development and regulatory approvals before it can be marketed in the
United States or internationally. There can be no assurance that the Company's
development efforts will be successful or that the Patient State Analyzer or any
other product developed by the Company will be safe or effective, capable of
being manufactured in commercial quantities at acceptable costs, approved by
regulatory authorities or successfully marketed. If the Patient State Analyzer
is not successfully commercialized, the Company's business, financial condition
and results of operations would be materially adversely affected.

UNCERTAINTY OF MARKET ACCEPTANCE. The Company's HydroDot
NeuroMonitoring System represents a novel method to monitor
neurophysiological activity. The Equinox EEG System is being offered as a
lower cost alternative to other EEG systems currently marketed. The Patient
State Analyzer is being designed primarily to monitor the effects of
anesthesia on a patient during medical procedures by analyzing such patient's
neurophysiological activity and alerting the anesthesiologist of changes in
this activity. There can be no assurance that these products or any other
products developed by the Company will gain any significant degree of market
acceptance among physicians, patients and health care payors, even if the
necessary international and United States regulatory approvals are obtained
and distribution channels are established. The Company believes that
recommendations and endorsements by physicians will be essential for market
acceptance of the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, Equinox EEG System,
Patient State Analyzer and other products developed by the Company, and there
can be no assurance that any such recommendations or endorsements will be
obtained. Physicians will not use the Company's products unless they
determine, based on clinical data and other factors, that these products are
an attractive alternative to other means of monitoring neurophysiological
activity and that the clinical benefits to the patient and cost savings
achieved through use of these products outweigh the cost of switching to such
products from other commercially available alternatives. Acceptance among
physicians will depend upon the Company's ability to train neurologists,
anesthesiologists and other potential users of the Company's products and the
willingness of such users to learn new patient monitoring methods. Market
acceptance will also be dependent upon acceptance of the Company's products
by hospital administrators and will require the Company to provide evidence
to such administrators of the cost effectiveness and clinical utility of the
Company's products. Failure of the Company's

-15-



products to achieve significant market acceptance would have a material
adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of
operations.

LIMITED OPERATING HISTORY AND COMMERCIAL SCALEUP RISK. The Company has a
limited history of operations. Since its inception in January 1990, the Company
has been primarily engaged in research and development of neurophysiological
monitoring products. The Company has sold a small number of units of the
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System and it has generated only limited revenues from
commercial sales and does not have experience in manufacturing, marketing or
selling its products in quantities necessary for achieving profitability.
Whether the Company can successfully manage the transition to a larger scale
commercial enterprise will depend upon the successful development of its
manufacturing capability, the development of its marketing and distribution
network, obtaining foreign regulatory approvals for the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring
System, obtaining domestic and foreign regulatory approvals for the Equinox EEG
System, Patient State Analyzer and other potential products and strengthening
its financial and management systems, procedures and controls. With respect to
the Company's proposed Patient State Analyzer System, the Company will need to
develop a sales and marketing effort targeted towards anesthesiologists, rather
than neurologists to whom the Company has previously marketed its products.
Failure to make such a transition successfully would have a material adverse
effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.
In addition, there can be no assurance that the Company will achieve significant
revenues from either domestic or international sales or achieve or sustain
profitability in the future.

HISTORY OF LOSSES AND EXPECTATION OF FUTURE LOSSES; FLUCTUATIONS IN
OPERATING RESULTS. The Company has experienced significant operating losses
since inception and, as of December 31, 1996, had an accumulated deficit of
approximately $13.0 million. The development and commercialization of the
Company's current products and other new products, if any, will require
substantial development, clinical, regulatory and other expenditures. The
Company expects its operating losses to continue for at least the next few years
as it continues to expend substantial resources to expand marketing and sales
activities, scale up manufacturing capabilities, increase research and
development and support regulatory and reimbursement approvals. Results of
operations may fluctuate significantly from quarter to quarter and will depend
upon numerous factors, including actions relating to regulatory and
reimbursement matters, the extent to which the Company's products gain market
acceptance, introduction of alternative means for neurophysiological monitoring
and competition.

LIMITED MANUFACTURING, MARKETING AND SALES EXPERIENCE. The Company has
only limited experience in manufacturing the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System and
has not yet manufactured it in commercial quantities. As a result, the Company
has no experience manufacturing its products in volumes necessary for the
Company to achieve significant commercial sales, and there can be no assurance
that reliable, high volume manufacturing can be achieved at a commercially
reasonable cost. If the Company encounters any manufacturing difficulties,
including problems involving product yields, quality control and assurance,
supplies of components or shortages of qualified personnel, it could have a
material adverse affect on its business, financial condition and results of
operations.

The Company has only sold a small number of its HydroDot NeuroMonitoring
Systems in the United States since it obtained 510(k) clearance in October 1993
and does not have experience marketing and selling such products in commercial
quantities. The Company markets and sells its HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System
and Equinox EEG System and intends to market and sell its Patient State Analyzer
and other potential products in the United States through a direct sales force
and OEM partners, and there can be no assurance that such direct sales force and
OEM partners will effectively market and sell the Company's products.

Through its distributors, the Company has obtained the regulatory
approvals, if any, required to market and sell its products in certain foreign
markets. However, regulatory requirements vary by region, and compliance with
such regulations may be costly and time consuming. There can be no assurance
that the Company will obtain the necessary regulatory approvals or successfully
sell its products in any additional foreign markets. Additionally,
international revenues are subject to a number of risks, including generally
greater difficulties in accounts receivables collections, financial instability
of distributors, failure of distributors to effectively promote products, longer
payment cycles, exposure to foreign currency fluctuations, and political and
economic instability.

If the Company secures the necessary regulatory approvals to sell the
Patient State Analyzer or any other potential products in the United States
or in foreign markets, the Company would have to establish a separate
marketing and sales

-16-



capability for those products. This would require significant effort and
expense and would be subject to all the risks attendant to establishing a
marketing and sales capability for its current products, including its
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System and Equinox EEG System. Failure by the
Company to successfully market its products domestically or internationally
would have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, financial
condition and results of operations.

RISKS OF INTERNATIONAL SALES. A number of risks are inherent in
international operations and transactions, and the Company will be subject to
such risks to the extent it engages in international sales. International sales
and operations may be limited or disrupted by the imposition of government
controls, changes in regulatory requirements or interpretations thereof, export
license requirements, political instability, trade restrictions, changes in
tariffs, financial instability of distributors, collectibility of receivables,
differences in purchasing systems for medical products, and difficulties in
staffing, coordinating and managing international operations. Additionally, the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations may be
adversely affected by fluctuations in international currency exchange rates as
well as constraints on the Company's ability to maintain or increase prices.
There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to successfully
commercialize its current or future products in any international market.

GOVERNMENT REGULATION. The manufacture and sale of medical devices,
including the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System, Equinox EEG System, Patient State
Analyzer and other potential products, are subject to extensive regulation by
numerous governmental authorities in the United States, principally the FDA and
corresponding state agencies, and in other countries. In the United States, the
Company's products are regulated as medical devices and are subject to the FDA's
premarket clearance or approval requirements. The process of obtaining FDA and
other required regulatory approvals is lengthy, expensive and uncertain,
frequently requiring from one to several years from the date of FDA submission
if premarket approval is obtained at all.

Regulatory approvals, if granted, may include significant limitations on
the indicated uses for which the product may be marketed. In addition, to
obtain such approvals, the FDA and certain foreign regulatory authorities impose
numerous other requirements with which medical device manufacturers must comply.
FDA enforcement policy strictly prohibits the marketing of approved medical
devices for unapproved uses. In addition, product approvals could be withdrawn
for failure to comply with regulatory standards or the occurrence of unforeseen
problems following the initial marketing. The Company will be required to
adhere to applicable FDA regulations regarding GMP and similar regulations in
other countries, which include testing, control and documentation requirements.
Ongoing compliance with GMP and other applicable regulatory requirements will be
monitored through periodic inspections by federal and state agencies and by
comparable agencies in other countries. Failure to comply with applicable
regulatory requirements, including marketing products for unapproved uses, could
result in, among other things, warning letters, fines, injunctions, civil
penalties, recall or seizure of products, total or partial suspension of
production, refusal of the government to grant premarket clearance or premarket
approval for devices, withdrawal of approvals and criminal prosecution. Changes
in existing regulations or adoption of new governmental regulations or policies
could prevent or delay regulatory approval of the Company's products. Certain
material changes to medical devices also are subject to FDA review and clearance
or approval.

Sales of medical devices outside of the United States are subject to
international regulatory requirements that vary from country to country. The
time required to obtain approval for sale internationally may be longer or
shorter than that required for FDA approval, and the requirements may differ.
In Europe, the Company will be required to obtain the certifications necessary
to enable the "CE" mark to be affixed to the Company's products by mid 1998 in
order to sell products commercially in member countries of the European Union.
The Company has not obtained these certifications, and there can be no assurance
it will be able to do so in a timely manner. Many other countries in which the
Company intends to operate either do not currently regulate medical devices or
have minimal registration requirements; however, these countries may develop
more extensive regulations in the future that could affect the Company's ability
to market its products. In addition, significant costs and requests for
additional information may be encountered by the Company in its efforts to
obtain regulatory approvals. Any such events could substantially delay or
preclude the Company from marketing its products in the United States or
internationally.

There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to obtain the
certifications necessary for affixation of the CE mark on the Company's products
or other necessary regulatory approvals or clearances on a timely basis or at
all, and delays in receipt of or failure to receive such approvals or
clearances, the loss of previously obtained approvals, or failure to comply with

-17-



existing or future regulatory requirements would have a material adverse effect
on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

INTENSE COMPETITION, TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES AND RISK OF OBSOLESCENCE.
Competition in the market for neurophysiological monitoring devices is intense
and could increase. The Company believes its principal competition will come
from existing providers of EEG equipment and electrodes. Most of the Company's
competitors have significantly greater financial, technical, research,
marketing, sales, distribution and other resources than the Company, as well as
greater name recognition. There can be no assurance that the Company's
competitors will not succeed in developing or marketing technologies and
products that are more effective or commercially attractive than any that are
being developed or marketed by the Company, or that such competitors will not
succeed in obtaining regulatory approval, introducing or commercializing any
such products prior to the Company. Such developments could have a material
adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of
operations.

RELIANCE ON PATENTS AND PROTECTION OF PROPRIETARY TECHNOLOGY. The
Company's ability to compete effectively will depend in part on its ability to
develop and maintain proprietary aspects of its technology. There can be no
assurance that the Company's issued patents or any patents that may be issued as
a result of the Company's United States or international patent applications
will offer any degree of protection. There can be no assurance that any patents
that may be issued to the Company or any of the Company's patent applications
will not be challenged, invalidated or circumvented in the future. In addition,
there can be no assurance that competitors, many of which have substantial
resources and have made substantial investments in competing technologies, will
not seek to apply for and obtain patents that will prevent, limit or interfere
with the Company's ability to make, use or sell its products either in the
United States or in international markets.

The medical device industry has been characterized by extensive litigation
regarding patents and other intellectual property rights, and companies in the
medical device industry have employed intellectual property litigation to gain a
competitive advantage. There can be no assurance that the Company will not in
the future become subject to patent infringement claims and litigation or
interference proceedings declared by the USPTO to determine the priority of
inventions. The defense and prosecution of intellectual property suits, USPTO
interference proceedings and related legal and administrative proceedings are
both costly and time consuming. Litigation may be necessary to enforce patents
issued to the Company, to protect trade secrets or knowhow owned by the Company
or to determine the enforceability, scope and validity of the proprietary rights
of others.

Any litigation or interference proceedings will result in substantial
expense to the Company and significant diversion of effort by the Company's
technical and management personnel. An adverse determination in litigation or
interference proceedings to which the Company may become a party could subject
the Company to significant liabilities to third parties or require the Company
to seek licenses from third parties. Costs associated with licensing or similar
arrangements that may be involved in statement of intellectual property
disputes, including patent disputes, may be substantial and could include
ongoing royalties. Furthermore, there can be no assurance that necessary
licenses would be available to the Company on satisfactory terms if at all.
Adverse determinations in a judicial or administrative proceeding or failure to
obtain necessary licenses could prevent the Company from manufacturing and
selling its products, which would have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

In addition to patents, the Company relies on trade secrets and proprietary
know how, which it seeks to protect, in part, through appropriate
confidentiality and proprietary information agreements. These agreements
generally provide that all confidential information developed or made known to
the individual by the Company during the course of the individual's relationship
with the Company, is to be kept confidential and not disclosed to third parties,
except in specific circumstances. The agreements generally provide that all
inventions conceived by the individual in the course of rendering services to
the Company shall be the exclusive property of the Company; however, certain of
the Company's agreements with consultants, who typically are employed on a full
time basis by academic institutions or hospitals, do not contain assignment of
invention provisions. There can be no assurance that proprietary information or
confidentiality agreements with employees, consultants and others will not be
breached, that the Company would have adequate remedies for any breach, or that
the Company's trade secrets will not otherwise become known to or independently
developed by competitors.

UNCERTAINTY RELATING TO THIRD PARTY REIMBURSEMENT. In the United States,
health care providers, such as hospitals and physicians, that purchase medical
devices such as the Company's products, generally rely on Third Party payors,
principally

-18-



federal Medicare, state Medicaid and private health insurance plans, to
reimburse all or part of the cost of therapeutic and diagnostic procedures.
Reimbursement for neurophysiological monitoring procedures performed using
devices that have received FDA clearance or approval has generally been
available in the United States. The Company anticipates that in a capitated
payment system, such as the DRG system utilized by Medicare and many managed
care systems used by private health care payors, the cost of the Company's
products will be incorporated into the overall cost of the procedure and that
there will be no separate, additional reimbursement for the Company's
products.

Internationally, future market acceptance of the Company's products may be
dependent in part upon the availability of reimbursement within prevailing
health care payment systems. Reimbursement and health care payment systems in
international markets vary significantly by country. The main types of health
care payment systems in international markets are government sponsored health
care and private insurance. There can, however, be no assurance that
reimbursement for procedures performed using the Company's products will be
available in international markets under either governmental or private
reimbursement systems.

The Company could be adversely affected by changes in reimbursement
policies of governmental or private health care payors, particularly to the
extent any such changes affect reimbursement for procedures in which the
Company's products are used. Failure by physicians, hospitals and other users
of the Company's products to obtain sufficient reimbursement from health care
payors for procedures in which the Company's products are used, or adverse
changes in governmental and private third party payors' policies toward
reimbursement for such procedures, would have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.

PRODUCT LIABILITY AND RECALL RISK, LIMITED INSURANCE COVERAGE. The
manufacture and sale of medical products entail significant risk of product
liability claims or product recalls. There can be no assurance that the
Company's existing or future insurance coverage limits are or would be adequate
to protect the Company from any liabilities it might incur in connection with
the sale of its products. In addition, the Company may require increased
product liability coverage as its products are commercialized. Such insurance
is expensive and in the future may not be available on acceptable terms, if at
all. A successful product liability claim or series of claims brought against
the Company in excess of its insurance coverage, or a recall of the Company's
products, could have a material adverse effect on the Company's business,
financial condition and results of operations.

DEPENDENCE UPON KEY SUPPLIERS. Physiometrix purchases components used in
its products from various suppliers and relies on single sources for several
components. To date, the Company has not experienced significant component
shortages. Delays associated with any future component shortages could have a
material adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition and
results of operations, particularly as the Company scales up its manufacturing
activities in support of international commercial sales and United States
commercial sales.

DEPENDENCE UPON KEY PERSONNEL AND MEDICAL ADVISORS. The Company is
dependent upon a number of key management and technical personnel. The loss of
the services of one or more key employees would have a material adverse effect
on the Company. The Company has no employment agreements with any of its key
personnel. The Company's success will also depend on its ability to attract and
retain additional highly qualified management and technical personnel. The
Company faces intense competition for qualified personnel, many of whom are
often subject to competing employment offers, and there can be no assurance that
the Company will be able to attract and retain such personnel. There can be no
assurance that the proceeds of the Company's $1 million key person life
insurance policy on John A. Williams, its President and Chief Executive Officer,
would be sufficient to compensate the Company in the event of his loss.
Furthermore, the Company relies on the services of several medical and
scientific consultants, all of whom are employed on a full time basis by
hospitals or academic or research institutions. Such consultants are therefore
not available to devote their full time or attention to the Company's affairs.

UNCERTAINTY RELATING TO NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT. The Company's strategy
involves the design and development of new products. Products under
development include the Patient State Analyzer. The Company's future
revenues, and any future profitability of the Company, will depend upon the
successful completion of development of and commercial introduction of this
product. The product development process is time consuming and costly, and
there can be no assurance that product development will be successfully
completed, that necessary regulatory approvals or clearances will be granted
by the FDA on a timely basis, or at all, or that any new products developed
and introduced by the Company will achieve market acceptance. Failure by the

-19-



Company to develop, obtain necessary regulatory clearances or approvals for,
or successfully market, new products, including in particular the Patient
State Analyzer, would have a material adverse effect on the Company's
business, financial condition and results of operations.

UNCERTAINTY RELATED TO HEALTH CARE REFORM. Political, economic and
regulatory influences are subjecting the health care industry in the United
States to fundamental change. Although Congress has failed to pass
comprehensive health care reform legislation to date, the Company anticipates
that Congress, state legislatures and the private sector will continue to review
and assess alternative health care delivery and payment systems. Potential
approaches that have been considered include mandated basic health care
benefits, controls on health care spending through limitations on the growth of
private health insurance premiums and Medicare and Medicaid spending, the
creation of large insurance purchasing groups, price controls and other
fundamental changes to the health care delivery system. Legislative debate is
expected to continue in the future, and market forces are expected to demand
reduced costs. The Company cannot predict what impact the adoption of any
federal or state health care reform measures, future private sector reform or
market forces may have on its business.

POSSIBLE VOLATILITY OF STOCK PRICE. The stock market has from time to time
experienced significant price and volume fluctuations that are unrelated to the
operating performance of particular companies. These broad market fluctuations
may adversely affect the market price of the Company's Common Stock. In
addition, the market price of the Company's Common Stock is likely to be highly
volatile. Factors such as fluctuations in the Company's operating results,
announcements of technological innovations or new products by the Company or its
competitors, FDA and international regulatory actions, actions with respect to
reimbursement matters, developments with respect to patents or proprietary
rights, public concern as to the safety of products developed by the Company or
others, changes in health care policy in the United States and internationally,
changes in stock market analysts' recommendations regarding the Company, other
medical device companies or the medical device industry generally or general
market conditions may have a significant effect on the market price of the
Common Stock. In addition, it is possible that in a future fiscal quarter, the
Company's results of operations will fail to meet the expectations of stock
market analysts and investors and, in such event, the market price of the
Company's Common Stock would be materially and adversely affected.


ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

The Company leases an approximately 12,000 square foot facility in North
Billerica, Massachusetts. This facility includes manufacturing, laboratory and
office space. The facility is leased through December 14, 1999. The Company
believes these facilities will be adequate to meet its current and reasonably
anticipated future requirements.


ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The Company is not party to any legal proceedings.


ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

Not applicable.

-20-


PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

The Company's Common Stock is traded on the Nasdaq National Market
(ticker symbol). The number of record holders of the Company's Common Stock
at January 31, 1997 was 169. The Company has not paid any dividends since
its inception and does not intend to pay any dividends in the foreseeable
future.

The Company completed an initial public offering of 2,000,000 shares of
Common Stock in April 1996. Prior to the initial public offering, the
Company's Common Stock was not publicly traded.

Quarterly high and low stock prices are as follows:

QUARTER ENDED HIGH LOW
---------------------------------------- --------- ---------
June 30, 1996 (from April 30, 1996). . . $12-1/4 $7-3/4
September 30, 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . $ 7-3/4 $4-3/4
December 31, 1996. . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6-5/16 $3




In December 1995, January 1996 and February 1996 the Company borrowed a
total of $689,400 from certain of its stockholders. In addition to the
promissory notes evidencing the loans, the Company issued to the lenders on a
pro rata basis warrants to purchase an aggregate of 52,227 shares of Common
Stock at an exercise price of $6.60 per share. The notes were converted into
62,672 shares of Common Stock upon the completion of the Company's initial
public offering.

-21-




ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The selected financial data presented below with respect to the
Company's statements of operations for each of the three years in the period
ended December 31, 1996 and with respect to the Company's balance sheets at
December 31, 1995 and 1996 are derived from Financial Statements of the
Company and the Notes thereto included elsewhere in this Form 10-K that have
been audited by Ernst & Young LLP, independent auditors, and is qualified by
reference to such Financial Statements. The data set forth with respect to
the Company's operations for the fiscal years ended December 31, 1993,
September 30, 1992 and with respect to the Company's balance sheets at
September 30, 1992, December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994 are derived from
audited financial statements which are not included herein. The statement of
operations data for the three months ended December 31, 1992 are derived from
unaudited financial statements of the Company not included in this Form 10-K
and contain, in the opinion of the Company, all adjustments (consisting of
normal recurring adjustments) necessary for a fair presentation of the
Company's results of operations for such period. The selected financial data
set forth below is qualified in its entirety by, and should be read in
conjunction with, "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations" and the Financial Statements of the
Company and the Notes thereto included elsewhere in this Form 10-K.




THREE MONTHS
YEAR ENDED ENDED YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
SEPTEMBER 30, DECEMBER 31, ------------------------------------------------
1992(1) 1992(1) 1993 1994 1995 1996
-------------- --------------- ----------- ---------- ---------- -----------


STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS DATA:
Revenues. . . . . . . . . . . . $ -- $ -- $ -- $ 72,677 $ 321,835 $ 413,698

Costs and expenses:
Cost of goods sold . . . . -- -- -- 622,765 1,164,268 1,189,510
Research and development . 485,076 206,546 917,574 741,068 392,413 1,189,336
Selling, general and
administrative. . . . . . 344,460 160,703 1,163,641 1,756,515 1,575,481 1,652,596
-------------- --------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
829,536 367,249 2,081,215 3,120,348 3,132,162 4,031,442
-------------- --------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Operating loss. . . . . . . . . (829,536) (367,249) (2,081,215) (3,047,671) (2,810,327) (3,617,744)
Interest income . . . . . . . . 25,396 4,820 10,987 61,712 75,465 683,461
Interest expense. . . . . . . . -- (1,724) (25,611) (56,551) (36,876) (90,090)
-------------- --------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Net loss. . . . . . . . . . . . $ (804,140) $ (364,153) $(2,095,839) $(3,042,510) $(2,771,738) $(3,024,373)
-------------- --------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
-------------- --------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Net loss per share (pro forma
in 1995). . . . . . . . . . . $ (.76) $ (.61)
----------- -----------
----------- -----------
Shares used in computing
net loss per share (pro
forma in 1995) 3,657,091 4,936,433
---------- -----------
---------- -----------




SEPTEMBER 30, DECEMBER 31,
---------------- -----------------------------------------------------------
1992 (1) 1993 1994 1995 1996
---------------- -------------- ------------- ----------- -------------

BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Cash, cash equivalents
and short-term investments. . . . . $883,077 $ 105,747 $3,019,483 $ 432,126 $18,146,248
Working capital (deficit). . . . . . 803,613 (50,184) 2,662,202 (214,710) 16,990,259
Total assets . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,016,407 346,970 3,575,565 1,048,000 19,151,982
Notes payable to
stockholders, net of
current portion . . . . . . . . . . 43,307 223,986 176,420 82,089 --
Accumulated deficit. . . . . . . . . (1,702,475) (4,162,466) (7,204,976) (9,976,714) (13,001,087)
Total stockholders'
equity (deficit). . . . . . . . . . 880,875 (46,849) 2,814,877 46,944 17,575,615

- ---------------------------
(1) In 1994, the Company changed its year end from September 30 to December 31,
and revised the fiscal 1993 Financial Statements to conform to the new
fiscal year.

-22-



ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The following discussion of the financial condition and results of
operations of Physiometrix, Inc. should be read in conjunction with the
Financial Statements and related Notes thereto included elsewhere in this
Form 10-K. This Report on Form 10-K contains certain forward-looking
statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933
and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Actual events or
results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking
statements as a result of the factors described herein and in the documents
incorporated herein by reference. Such forward-looking statements include,
but are not limited to, statements concerning (i) business strategy; (ii)
products under development; (iii) other products; (iv) marketing and
distribution; (v) research and development; (vi) manufacturing; (vii)
competition; (viii) government regulation especially as it relates to FDA
approvals; (ix) third-party reimbursement and (x) operating and capital
requirements.

OVERVIEW

Since its inception in January 1990, Physiometrix has been engaged
primarily in the design and development and more recently the manufacture and
sale of noninvasive, advanced medical products. The Company's products which
incorporate proprietary materials and electronics technology are used in
neurological monitoring applications. The Company's initial products are
its e-Net headpiece and disposable HydroDot biosensors and custom
electronics, which are packaged as the HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System. The
Company also has two additional neurological monitoring products, the Equinox
EEG System which was commercially introduced in February 1997 and the Patient
State Analyzer, which is currently in clinical trials. The Company believes
that the Patient State Analyzer will be subject to FDA 510(k) clearance
notification. However, the FDA may require the Company to submit a premarket
approval ("PMA") application for this product. There can be no assurance
that the Company will be able to obtain necessary 510(k) clearance or PMA
application approval to market the Patient State Analyzer or any other
products on a timely basis, if at all.

Physiometrix has a limited history of operations and has experienced
significant operating losses since its inception. As of December 31, 1996,
the Company had an accumulated deficit of approximately $13.0 million. The
HydroDot NeuroMonitoring System is currently the Company's principal
commercial product and is expected to account for most of the Company's
revenue through 1997. The Company anticipates that its results of operations
will fluctuate on a quarterly basis for the foreseeable future due to several
factors, including actions relating to regulatory and reimbursement matters,
the extent to which the Company's products gain market acceptance,
introduction of alternative means for neurophysiological monitoring and
competition. Results of operations will also be affected by the progress of
clinical trials and in house development activities, and the extent to which
the Company establishes distribution channels for its products domestically
and internationally. There can be no assurance the Company will achieve
significant commercial revenues or profitability.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996, 1995 AND 1994

Revenues were $414,000 in 1996, $322,000 in 1995 and $73,000 in 1994.
The $92,000 increase in 1996 versus 1995 was primarily the result of
increased biosensor sales. The $249,000 increase in 1995 versus 1994 was the
result of a full year of sales of the Company's HydroDot NeuroMonitoring
System and the introduction of the NeuroLink in 1995.

Cost of goods sold were $1,190,000 in 1996, $1,164,000 in 1995 and
$623,000 in 1994. Cost of goods sold increased only $26,000 in 1996 versus
1995 due to lower material costs and no increase in overhead costs. The
$541,000 increase in 1995 versus 1994 was due to increased material costs and
increased personnel and other costs associated with the scale up of
manufacturing.

Research and development expenses were $1,189,000, $392,000 and $741,000
in 1996, 1995 and 1994, respectively. The $797,000 increase from 1995 to
1996 is primarily due to the increased personnel costs for the development of
the Company's Equinox and Patient State Analyzer (PSA) including clinical
trial costs for the PSA. The $349,000 decrease from 1994 to 1995



-23-



reflects the Company's emphasis on scaling up production and a resulting
shift of resources from research and development into manufacturing.

Selling, general and administrative expenses were $1,653,000 in 1996,
$1,575,000 in 1995 and $1,757,000 in 1994. The increase of only $78,000 in
1996 versus 1995 was primarily the result of lower facility and overhead
costs. The decrease of $182,000 from 1994 to 1995 was due primarily to lower
consulting expenses associated with manufacturing process development.

Interest income was $684,000, $75,000 and $62,000 in 1996, 1995 and
1994, respectively. The increase of $609,000 in 1996 was the result of
investing the cash proceeds from the Company's initial public offering.

Interest expense was $90,000, $37,000 and $57,000 in 1996, 1995 and
1994, respectively. The $53,000 increase in 1996 was primarily the result of
the Company incurring $500,000 in borrowings under a revolving credit
facility.

The Company has experienced operating losses since inception and
therefore has not paid any federal income taxes since its inception. The
Company accounts for income taxes under Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 109 ("FAS No. 109"). Realization of deferred tax assets is
dependent on future earnings, if any, the timing and amount of which are
uncertain. Accordingly, valuation allowances, in amounts equal to the net
deferred tax assets as of December 31, 1996 and 1995, have been established
in each period to reflect these uncertainties.

At December 31, 1996, the Company had federal net operating loss
carryforwards of $9,200,000 and federal and state tax credit carryforwards of
$196,000, that will expire in 2011, if not utilized. Utilization of net
operating loss and tax credit carryforwards will be subject to substantial
annual limitations provided by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
The annual limitation may result in the expiration of net operating loss and
tax credit carryforwards before full utilization.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

In April 1996, the Company completed an initial public offering of
2,000,000 shares of common stock at $11.00 per share. Net proceeds to the
Company were approximately $19,780,000. An additional $380,000 was raised in
1996 through the issuance of notes payable to stockholders. In 1995, the
Company raised $309,000 through the issuance of notes payable to stockholders
and in 1994 raised $5,900,000 in a private equity financing. At December 31,
1996, the Company's cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments were
$18,146,000 as compared to $432,000 at December 31, 1995.

The Company's operating activities used cash of $2,581,000 in 1996 as
compared to $2,730,000 in 1995. The $149,000 decrease in net cash used was
primarily the result of an increase in accounts payable and accrued expenses.

The Company's financing activities provided cash of $20,629,000 in 1996
as compared to $243,000 provided in 1995. This increase was the result of
the Company receiving $19,780,000 from its initial public offering and
$500,000 in March 1996 under a revolving credit agreement with a lending
institution.

Net cash used in investing activities in 1996 was $18,151,000, of which
$17,818,000 has been invested in short-term investments. No excess cash was
available for investments in 1995.

The Company's principal source of liquidity at December 31, 1996
consisted of cash, cash equivalents and short term investments of
$18,146,000. The Company believes that its capital resources will be
sufficient to meet the Company's operating and capital requirements at least
through 1997. The Company's future liquidity and capital requirements will
depend on numerous factors, including progress of the Company's clinical
trials, actions relating to regulatory approvals, the cost and timing of
expansion of marketing, sales, manufacturing and product development
activities, the extent to which the Company's products gain market acceptance
and competitive developments. The Company may in the future seek to raise
additional funds through bank facilities, debt equity offerings or other
sources of capital. There can be no assurance that additional financing, if
required, will be available on satisfactory terms, if at all.


-24-




ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

The Independent Auditors' Report, Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
begin on page F-1.

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

Not applicable.

-25-



PART III


Certain information required by Part III is omitted from this Report on
Form 10-K in that the Registrant will file a definitive proxy statement within
120 days after the end of its fiscal year pursuant to Regulation 14A with
respect to the 1997 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Proxy Statement") to be
held May 13, 1997 and certain information included therein is incorporated
herein by reference.

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

The information required by this item relating to directors is
incorporated by reference to the information under the caption "PROPOSAL NO.
1 ELECTION OF DIRECTORS" in the Proxy Statement.

The executive officers of the Registrant, who are elected by the board
of directors, are as follows:

NAME AGE POSITION
- -------------------------- ----- ---------------------------------

John A. Williams 49 President, Chief Executive
Officer and Director
E. Stuart Tuthill 46 Vice President of Sales and
Marketing
Dominic Marro 52 Vice President of Research
and Development
Michael J. Tubridy 41 Vice President of Finance &
Administration and Chief
Financial Officer

JOHN A. WILLIAMS joined the Company in December 1993 and has served as
a member of the Board of Directors and as the Company's President and
Chief Executive Officer. Prior to that time, Mr. Williams served as
President of Bruel and Kjaer Medical, a medical device company, from 1990 to
1993. Mr. Williams was Vice President of Sales and Marketing at
Medtronic/AMI, a medical device company, from 1988 to 1990 and Vice President
of Sales and Marketing, Worldwide at Merrimack Laboratories from 1983 to 1987.

E. STUART TUTHILL joined the Company in March 1994 as Vice President of
Sales and Marketing. Prior to that time, Mr. Tuthill served as Director of
Sales at Bruel and Kjaer Medical from 1989 to 1994. Mr. Tuthill also served
as National Sales Manager at Medtronic/AMI, a medical device company, from
1986 to 1988.

DOMINIC MARRO joined the Company in April 1995 as Vice President of
Research and Development. Prior to that time, Mr. Marro served as Director
of Engineering at Visiplex Instruments from 1994 to 1995 and as President of
Advanced Simulator Development Corp., a manufacturer of simulation equipment
for aviation, from 1988 to 1993.

MICHAEL J. TUBRIDY joined the Company in November 1994 as Vice President
of Finance & Administration and Chief Financial Officer. Prior to that time,
Mr. Tubridy served as Vice President and Chief Financial Officer at Open Data
Corporation, a software company, from 1993 to 1994. Mr. Tubridy was
Corporate Controller at Octocom Systems, Inc., a data communications company,
from 1990 to 1993 and Corporate Controller of Genzyme Corporation, a
biotechnology company, from 1988 to 1990. Mr. Tubridy is a Certified Public
Accountant.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to
the information under the caption "Executive Compensation" in the Proxy
Statement.


-26-



ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to
the information under the caption "Record Date and Stock Ownership" in the
Proxy Statement.

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference to
the information under the caption "Certain Transactions" in the Proxy
Statement.

-27-



PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(A) 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The following Financial Statements of Physiometrix, Inc. and
Report of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors are in this
Form 10-K.
PAGE
----

Report of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors. F1
Balance Sheets, December 31, 1995 and 1996. F2
Statements of Operations, Years Ended
December 31, 1994, 1995 and 1996. F3
Statements of Cash Flows, Years Ended
December 31, 1994, 1995 and 1996. F4
Statements of Stockholders' Equity, Years
Ended December 31, 1994, 1995 and 1996. F5
Notes to Financial Statements. F6

2. FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

All schedules are omitted because they are not applicable or the
required information is shown in the Financial Statements or the
notes thereto.

3. EXHIBITS

Refer to (c) below.

(B) REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

The Company was not required to and did not file any reports on
Form 8-K during the year ended December 31, 1996.

(C) EXHIBITS

EXHIBIT
NO. DESCRIPTION
- --------- ----------------------------------------------------------
3.1(1) Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company.
3.2(1) Bylaws of the Company, as amended.
4.1(1) Specimen Common Stock Certificate.
4.2(1) Form of Warrant Agreement between the Company and
Cruttendon Roth Incorporated, with form of Warrant attached.
10.1(1) Form of Indemnification Agreement between the
Company and each of its directors and officers.
10.2(1) 1991 Incentive Stock Plan and Form of Stock Option
Agreement thereunder.
10.3(2) 1996 Director Option Plan.
10.4(2) 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan and forms of
agreements thereunder.
10.5(1) Lease dated October 11, 1994 between the Company
and Yvon Cormier, Trustee of YCEE Investment Trust,
for a facility located at Five Billerica Park,
101 Billerica Avenue, North Billerica, Massachusetts
01862.
10.6(1) Restated Shareholder Rights Agreement dated June 24,
1994 between the Company and certain holders of
the Company's securities.
11.1 Calculation of earnings per share.
23.1 Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors.

-28-



EXHIBIT
NO. DESCRIPTION
- --------- ----------------------------------------------------------
24.1 Power of Attorney.
27.1 Financial Data Schedule.

- -----------------------
(1) Filed as an Exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on Form
S-1 (File No. 33302138) and incorporated herein by reference.
(2) Filed as an Exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on
Form S-8 (File No. 33316525) and incorporated herein by reference.



-29-


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Board of Directors and Stockholders
Physiometrix, Inc.

We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Physiometrix, Inc. as
of December 31, 1995 and 1996, and the related statements of operations,
stockholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period
ended December 31, 1996. These financial statements are the responsibility
of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to
obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free
of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis,
evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.
An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Physiometrix,
Inc. at December 31, 1995 and 1996, and the results of its operations and its
cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1996,
in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

/s/ ERNST & YOUNG LLP

.
Boston, Massachusetts
February 12, 1997

F-1




PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
BALANCE SHEETS


DECEMBER 31
---------------------------
1995 1996
------------ --------------
ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 432,126 $ 328,331
Short-term investments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -- 17,817,917
Accounts receivable, net of allowances of $15,000
in 1995 and $20,000 in 1996 for doubtful
accounts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90,912 38,196
Inventories, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171,862 279,789
Prepaid expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9,357 102,393
---------- -----------
Total current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 704,257 18,566,626
Equipment, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274,425 492,838
Due from officer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63,000 84,000
Other assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,318 8,518
---------- -----------
Total assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,048,000 $19,151,982
---------- -----------
---------- -----------

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
Accounts payable. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 255,864 $ 691,690
Accrued expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253,089 261,107
Convertible notes payable to stockholders . . . . . 308,972 --
Demand note payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -- 541,334
Current portion of notes payable to stockholder . . 101,042 82,236
---------- -----------
Total current liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 918,967 1,576,367
Notes payable to stockholder, net of current portion . . 82,089 --
Commitments and contingencies
Stockholders' equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Preferred stock: $.001 par value; 10,000,000
shares authorized: Series D convertible
preferred stock, 2,965,600 shares
issued and outstanding in 1995 . . . . . . . . 2,966 --
Series E convertible preferred stock,
1,062,062 shares issued and
outstanding in 1995. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,062 --
Common stock: $.001 par value, 15,000,000
shares in 1995 and 50,000,000
shares in 1996 authorized; 134,154
shares in 1995 and 5,580,324 shares
in 1996 issued and outstanding . . . . . . . . 134 5,580
Additional paid-in capital . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10,019,496 30,571,122
Accumulated deficit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (9,976,714) (13,001,087)
---------- -----------
Total stockholders' equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46,944 17,575,615
---------- -----------
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity . . . . . . .$ 1,048,000 $19,151,982
---------- -----------
---------- -----------


See accompanying notes


F-2



PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS



YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
-------------------------------------
1994 1995 1996
------------ ------------ ------------

Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 72,677 $ 321,835 $ 413,698

Costs and expenses:
Cost of goods sold. . . . . . . . . . 622,765 1,164,268 1,189,510
Research and development . . . . . . 741,068 392,413 1,189,336
Selling, general and administrative . 1,756,515 1,575,481 1,652,596
----------- ------------ ------------
3,120,348 3,132,162 4,031,442
----------- ------------ ------------
----------- ------------ ------------
Operating loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (3,047,671) (2,810,327) (3,617,744)
Interest income . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61,712 75,465 683,461
Interest expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . (56,551) (36,876) (90,090)
----------- ------------ ------------
Net loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $(3,042,510) $ (2,771,738) $(3,024,373)
----------- ------------ ------------
----------- ------------ ------------
Net loss per share (pro forma in 1995) . . $ (.76) $ (.61)
------------ ------------
------------ ------------
Shares used in computing net loss per
share (pro forma in 1995). . . . . . . . . 3,657,091 4,936,433
------------ ------------
------------ ------------




See accompanying notes



F-3



PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS



YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
--------------------------------------------
1994 1995 1996
------------- ------------- -------------

OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $(3,042,510) $(2,771,738) $ (3,024,373)
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net
cash used in operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization . . . . . . . . 70,222 96,342 114,640
Loss on disposal of equipment . . . . . . . . 19,896 22,433 325
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Accounts receivable . . . . . . . . . . (48,176) (42,736) 52,716
Inventories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (129,751) (42,111) (107,927)
Prepaid expenses and other assets. . . . (60,560) 6,839 (60,236)
Accounts payable and accrued expenses. . 418,711 1,453 443,844
----------- ----------- -------------
Net cash used in operating activities. . . . . . . (2,772,168) (2,729,518) (2,581,011)

INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
Purchase of equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (182,490) (106,747) (334,178)
Proceeds from sale of equipment. . . . . . . . . . 16,000 6,188 800
Purchase of available-for-sale securities. . . . . -- -- (150,684,912)
Proceeds from maturity of available-for-sale securities -- -- 132,866,995
----------- ----------- -------------
Net cash used in investing activities. . . . . . . (166,490) (100,559) (18,151,295)
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Proceeds from issuance of demand note. . . . . . . -- -- 541,334
Proceeds from notes payable to stockholders. . . . -- 308,972 380,428
Principal payments on notes payable to stockholders (51,842) (70,057) (100,895)
Proceeds from issuance of preferred stock. . . . . 5,902,780 -- --
Proceeds from issuance of common stock . . . . . . 1,456 3,805 19,807,644
----------- ----------- -------------
Net cash provided by financing activities. . . . . 5,852,394 242,720 20,628,511
----------- ----------- -------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and
cash equivalents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,913,736 (2,587,357) (103,795)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year . . 105,747 3,019,483 432,126
----------- ----------- -------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year . . . . . $ 3,019,483 $ 432,126 $ 328,331
----------- ----------- -------------
----------- ----------- -------------



See accompanying notes


F-4




PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY



PREFERRED STOCK COMMON STOCK TOTAL
----------------------- --------------------- ADDITIONAL ACCUMULATED STOCKHOLDERS'
SHARES AMOUNT SHARES AMOUNT PAID-IN-CAPITAL DEFICIT EQUITY
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------

Balance at January 1, 1994. . . . -- $ -- 2,928 $ 3 $ 4,115,614 $ (4,162,466) $ (46,849)

Issuance of Series D
preferred stock, net of
issuance costs of $22,930 . 2,965,600 2,966 982,408 985,374
Issuance of Series E
preferred stock, net of
issuance of costs of
$392,904. . . . . . . . . 1,062,062 1,062 4,916,344 4,917,406
Issuance of common stock
upon exercise of options. 37,746 38 1,418 1,456
Net loss. . . . . . . . . . (3,042,510) (3,042,510)
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------
Balance at December 31, 1994 . . 4,027,662 4,028 40,674 41 10,015,784 (7,204,976) 2,814,877
Issuance of common stock
upon exercise of options. 93,480 93 3,412 3,505
Issuance of warrants. . . . 300 300
Net loss. . . . . . . . . . (2,771,738) (2,771,738)
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------
Balance at December 31, 1995 . . 4,027,662 4,028 134,154 134 10,019,496 (9,976,714) 46,944

Issuance of common stock
pursuant to initial public
offering, net of issuance
costs of $ 671,160. . . . 2,000,000 2,000 19,776,841 19,778,841
Conversion of preferred
stock to common stock
pursuant to initial public
offering. . . . . . . . . (4,027,662) (4,028) 3,222,130 3,222 806
Conversion of bridge loan
financing to common stock
pursuant to initial public
offering. . . . . . . . . 62,672 63 689,337 689,400
Deferred compensation related
to stock options granted. 56,000 56,000
Issuance of common stock
upon exercise of options. 161,368 161 28,157 28,318
Issuance of warrants. . . . 485 485
Net loss. . . . . . . . . . (3,024,373) (3,024,373)
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------
Balance at December 31, 1996 . . -- $ -- 5,580,324 $ 5,580 $ 30,571,122 $ (13,001,087) $ 17,575,615
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ----------------





F-5



PHYSIOMETRIX, INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


1. COMPANY DESCRIPTION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

THE COMPANY

Physiometrix, Inc. (the "Company") is engaged in the development,
manufacturing and marketing of medical devices for use in neurological
monitoring applications during surgical and diagnostic procedures.

USE OF ESTIMATES

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

CASH AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS

Cash equivalents consist principally of United States Treasury bills and
certificates of deposit with maturities of three months or less at the date
of purchase. In addition, the Company has certain investments in commercial
paper, U.S. government agencies and debt securities, which do not meet the
definition of cash equivalents and have been classified as short-term
investments. These securities are considered available-for-sale securities.
The estimated fair value is equal to the cost of the securities and due to
the nature of the securities, there are no unrealized gains or losses at the
balance sheet dates.

CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT RISK

The Company places its cash investments in high quality short-term,
interest-bearing investment grade securities including U.S. Treasury
securities and high grade corporate notes. By policy, the Company limits the
amount of credit exposure in any one financial instrument or institution.
Two customers each accounted for approximately 12% of the Company's revenue
in 1996. One customer accounted for 22% of the Company's revenue in 1995.

INVENTORIES

Inventories are stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out) or
market.

EQUIPMENT

Equipment is recorded at cost and is depreciated using the straight line
method over its estimated useful life of five years.

REVENUE RECOGNITION

The Company recognizes revenue for product sales upon shipment, net of
allowances for discounts and estimated returns which are also provided for at
the time of shipment.

NET LOSS PER SHARE

The net loss per share in 1996 and pro forma net loss per share in 1995
are computed using the weighted average number of outstanding shares of
common stock and common stock equivalents, assuming conversion of Series D
and E convertible preferred stock into common shares (as of their original
date of issuance), which occurred upon the completion of the Company's
initial public offering, and the exercise of stock options and warrants
(using the treasury stock method). Common stock equivalents are excluded
from the computation when their effect is anti-dilutive; however, pursuant to
the requirements

F-6





of the Securities Exchange Commission, common stock equivalent shares
relating to stock options and warrants (using the treasury stock method) and
convertible notes payable issued during the twelve-month period prior to the
initial public offering are included for all periods prior to the April 1996
initial public offering whether or not they are anti-dilutive. Earnings per
share for 1994 have not been presented since such amounts are not deemed
meaningful due to the significant change in the Company's capital structure
that occurred in connection with the initial public offering.

2. INVENTORIES

Inventories consist of the following at December 31:


1995 1996
--------- ---------
Raw materials. . . . . $120,878 $149,032
Work in progress . . . 20,622 78,726
Finished goods . . . . 30,362 52,031
--------- ---------
$171,862 $279,789
--------- ---------
--------- ---------

3. EQUIPMENT

Equipment consists of the following at December 31:

1995 1996
--------- ---------
Computer equipment. . . . . . $135,527 $362,746
Machinery and equipment . . . 285,372 414,831
Construction in progress. . . 27,000 --
--------- ---------
447,899 777,577

Accumulated depreciation. . . (173,474) (284,739)
--------- ---------
$274,425 $492,838
--------- ---------
--------- ---------

4. ACCRUED EXPENSES

Accrued expense consist of the following at December 31:

1995 1996
--------- ---------
Payroll. . . . . . . . . $ 96,901 $115,036
Professional fees. . . . 39,387 65,731
Other. . . . . . . . . . 116,801 80,340
--------- ---------
$253,089 $261,107
--------- ---------
--------- ---------

5. LINE OF CREDIT

In March 1996, the Company entered into a one year $500,000 revolving
credit agreement with a lending institution with interest at a rate of 12.5%
per annum. At December 31, 1996, $541,334, including accrued interest is
outstanding. Under the terms of the credit agreement the Company, upon the
completion of the initial public offering, pledged a $500,000 certificate of
deposit to the lender as collateral for the loan to release the lien on all
other assets. Additionally, the Company issued to the lender a warrant to
purchase 6,000 shares of the Company's common stock at $11 per share, the
fair market value of the stock on the date of grant. This warrant expires in
March 2001.

6. LEASES

The Company leases its administrative and manufacturing facility under a
non-cancelable operating lease which expires in December 1999. Future
minimum operating lease payments as of December 31, 1996 are as follows:

F-7



1997. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $75,810
1998. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75,810
1999. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72,651
----------
Total minimum lease payments. . . . . . . . . . $224,271
----------
----------

Total rent expense was approximately $132,000 in 1994, $165,000 in 1995
and $ 96,000 in 1996.

7. STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

On April 3, 1996, the stockholders approved a 1 for 1.25 reverse stock
split of common stock effected in the form of a stock dividend, effective
prior to completion of the initial public offering. All shares of common
stock and related per share amounts, included in the accompanying financial
statements and notes thereto, have been retroactively restated to give effect
to the reverse stock split. The stockholders voted to increase the number of
authorized shares of common stock to 50,000,000. An additional 5,000,000
shares of preferred stock, $.001 par value, were authorized issuable in one
or more series, each of such series to have such rights and preferences,
including voting rights, dividends rights, conversion rights, redemption
privileges and liquidation preferences, as shall be determined by the Board
of Directors.

On April 30, 1996, the Company completed an initial public offering of
2,000,000 shares of its common stock at a price of $11.00 per share. The net
proceeds to the Company were approximately $19,780,000. All Series D and
Series E convertible preferred stock were converted to 3,222,130 shares of
common stock.

At December 31, 1996, 1,277,100 shares of common stock have been
reserved for issuance upon exercise of common stock warrants and stock
options.

8. NOTES PAYABLE TO STOCKHOLDERS

The Company has financed certain equipment purchases through a credit
facility provided by a stockholder of the Company. The related promissory
notes, secured by substantially all equipment of the Company, bear interest
at 12.5% per annum and are due in 48 monthly installments of principal and
interest amounting to $9,620, plus a final payment of $53,000 at maturity on
December 1, 1997. Principal payments of $82,236 are due in 1997. Interest
paid was equivalent to interest expense in 1994, 1995 and 1996.

In December 1995, the Company entered into a loan and warrant agreement
with its preferred stockholders. From December 1995 to February 1996,
$689,400 were provided to the Company at 10.25% interest. The Company
converted the principal amount of this note into 62,672 shares of common
stock upon the completion of the initial public offering. In addition, the
Company issued and sold to the noteholders warrants to purchase equity
securities, up to an amount equal to 50% of the principal amount of the
notes, at a formula price specified by the terms of the loan and warrant
agreement. The warrants expire on June 1, 2001. The assumed exercise of
these warrants would result in the issuance of 52,227 shares of Common stock
at $6.60 per share.

9. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

STOCK - BASED COMPENSATION

The Company has elected to follow Accounting Principles Board Opinion
No. 25 ("APB 25"), "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees" and related
interpretations in accounting for its stock-based compensation plans, rather
than the alternative fair value accounting method provided for under
Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 123 ("Statement 123"),
"Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation," as this alternative requires the
use of option valuation models that were not developed for use in valuing
employee stock options. Under APB 25, where the exercise price of options
granted under these plans equals the market price of the underlying stock on
the date of grant, no compensation expense is required.



F-8




Pro forma information regarding net loss and net loss per share was
computed in accordance with Statement 123, and has been determined as if the
Company has accounted for its employee stock options granted subsequent to
December 31, 1994 under the fair value method of that Statement. The fair
value for these options was estimated at the date of grant using a
Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following weighted-average
assumptions for 1995 and 1996, risk-free interest rate of 6.42%, dividend
yield of 0%, volatility factor of the expected market price of the Company's
common stock of 66% and a weighted-average expected life of the option of 5.5
years.

The Company has determined that the pro forma net loss per share as
computed under Statement 123 is not materially different from the net loss
per share as currently disclosed under APB 25.

STOCK OPTION PLAN

The Company's 1991 Incentive Stock Plan (the Plan) provides for the
issuance of incentive and nonstatutory common stock options to employees,
officers and consultants. The Plan provides for the granting of up to
1,500,000 options to purchase shares of the Company's common stock. Except
for nonstatutory options, the exercise price of the options granted under the
Plan may not be less than 100% of the fair market value of the common stock
subject to the option on the date of grant as determined by the Board of
Directors. Generally, options granted under the Plan vest over a four-year
period and expire ten years from the date of grant.

A summary of option activity is as follows:



WEIGHTED
AVERAGE
EXERCISE PRICE
1994 1995 1996 1996
------------ ------------ ------------- ----------

Outstanding at beginning of year. . . . . . . . . 312 606,000 748,228 $ .30
Granted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 721,720 266,388 94,400 4.52
Canceled. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (78,286) (30,680) (10,597) .33
Exercised . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (37,746) (93,480) (161,350) .11
----------- ----------- ------------
Outstanding at end of year. . . . . . . . . . . . 606,000 748,228 670,681 $ .94
----------- ----------- ------------ -----
----------- ----------- ------------ -----
Price Range at end of year. . . . . . . . . . . . $.04 - $.63 $.04 - $.63 $.04 - $6.25
----------- ----------- ------------
----------- ----------- ------------
Exercisable at end of year. . . . . . . . . . . . 264,757 281,016 312,493 $ .34
----------- ----------- ------------ -----
----------- ----------- ------------ -----
Available for grant at end of year. . . . . . . . 32,374 59,374 536,743
----------- ----------- ------------
----------- ----------- ------------



The following table presents weighted average price and life information
about significant option groups outstanding at December 31, 1996:

Options Outstanding Options Exercisable
------------------------------ -----------------------------
Weighted Average
Remaining
Range of Contractual Weighted Average
Exercise Price Number Life (Yrs.) Number Exercise Price
- --------------- --------- ------------------ --------- ------------------
$.04-$.63 578,981 7.9 306,013 $ .24
$3.75-$6.25 91,700 9.6 6,480 $4.90


The stock option information has been adjusted to reflect the 1 for 1.25
reverse stock split effected in April 1996. The weighted average fair value
of options granted in 1996 was $3.03.

F-9



On January 22, 1996, 11,200 options were granted to purchase the
Company's common stock at a price below the fair market value as determined
by the Company's Board of Directors. Accordingly, the Company recorded
$56,000 in deferred compensation expense which is being amortized over the
stock options vesting period.

EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN AND DIRECTOR PLAN

On April 3, 1996, the stockholders approved the 1996 Director Option
Plan ("the Director Plan") and the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan ("the
Purchase Plan"). The Director Plan provides that each nonemployee director
who becomes a director will be granted a nonstatutory option to purchase
15,000 shares of common stock at its then fair market value. Annually
thereafter, each nonemployee director will be granted a nonstatutory option
to purchase 5,000 shares of common stock as its then fair market value. All
options will vest ratably over four years and expire ten years after date of
grant. A total of 150,000 shares of common stock are available for grant
under the Director Plan.

Under the Purchase Plan eligible employees may purchase common stock at
a price per share equal to 85% of the lower of the fair market value of the
common stock at the beginning of the offering period or end of each six month
purchase period. Participation in the offering is limited to 20% of the
employees compensation or $25,000 in any purchase period. The first offering
commenced on December 1, 1996 and the Purchase Plan will terminate April
2006. A total of 150,000 shares of common stock has been reserved for
issuance under the Purchase Plan.

401(k) RETIREMENT PLAN

In 1995, the Company adopted a 401(k) Savings Plan ("Savings Plan") for
all of its eligible employees. The Savings Plan allows all employees that
have attained the age of 21 to make annual, tax-deferred contributions of up
to 15% of their eligible compensation. Annually, the Company may make
discretionary matching contributions based upon a percentage of the
employees' contributions. The Company made no such contributions to the
Savings Plan in 1996 or 1995.

10. INCOME TAXES

Since the Company has incurred only losses since inception, and due to
the degree of uncertainty related to the use of the loss carryforwards, the
Company has fully reserved this benefit. At December 31, 1996, the Company
had tax net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $9.2 million
available to offset federal taxable income. The Company also has research
and development tax credit carryforwards of approximately $196,000 available
to offset federal and state income taxes. Both carryforwards expire in 2011.
The Company also had approximately $8.0 million in net operating loss
carryforwards to offset state taxable income. This carryforward expires in
2001. In accordance with Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code, the use
of the above carryforwards will be subject to annual limitations based upon
ownership changes of the Company's stock which have occurred.

Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effects of temporary
differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for
financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes.
Significant components of the Company's deferred tax assets as of December 31
are as follows:

1995 1996
------------ -------------
Net operating loss carryforwards. . . . . 2,676,000 $3,621,000
Research and development costs . . . . . 919,000 1,077,000
Research and development tax credits. . . 163,000 196,000
Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183,000 172,000
----------- ----------
3,941,000 5,066,000
Valuation allowance . . . . . . . . . . . (3,941,000) (5,066,000)
----------- ----------
Net deferred tax asset. . . . . . . . . . $ -- $ --
----------- ----------
----------- ----------

The valuation allowance increased by $1,125,000 in 1996 due primarily to
the unbenefitted net operating loss incurred in 1996. The tax net operating
loss carryforward differs from the accumulated deficit principally due to
temporary differences

F-10




in the recognition of certain revenue and expense items for financial and tax
reporting purposes, consisting primarily of research and development costs.

11. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Certain of the Company's legal services, principally related to patent
matters, are provided by a firm which is affiliated with a
director/shareholder. Payments to this company amounted to approximately
$30,500, $26,200 and $51,000 for 1994, 1995 and 1996, respectively.

The Company has also entered into an arrangement whereby $84,000 was
loaned to an officer as of December 31, 1996. The borrowings are due
commencing in 1999 through 2002. The loan accrued interest at the applicable
federal rate (6.40% at December 31, 1996).


F-11



SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act, the Registrant has
duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized.

Physiometrix, Inc.

By: /s/ JOHN A. WILLIAMS
---------------------------------------
John A. Williams
PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

KNOW ALL MEN AND WOMEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each person whose signature
appears below constitutes and appoints John A. Williams and Michael J. Tubridy,
jointly and severally, his or her attorneys in fact, and each with the power of
substitution, for him or her in any and all capacities, to sign any amendments
to this Report on Form 10-K, and to file the same, with exhibits thereto and
other documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, hereby ratifying and confirming all that each of said attorneys in
fact, or his or her substitute or substitutes, may do or cause to be done by
virtue thereof.

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this
report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the
Registrant and in the capacities and on the date indicated.


SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
- -------------------------- ------------------------------- -----------------

/s/ JOHN A. WILLIAMS President, Chief Executive March 31, 1997
- -------------------------- Officer and Director
John A. Williams (Principal Executive Officer)



/s/ MICHAEL J. TUBRIDY Vice President and Chief March 31, 1997
- -------------------------- Financial Officer (Principal
Michael J. Tubridy Financial and Accounting Officer)



/s/ THOMAS BARUCH Director March 31, 1997
- --------------------------
Thomas Baruch


/s/ ANNETTE CAMPBELL-WHITE Director March 31, 1997
- --------------------------
Annette Campbell-White


/s/ JAMES E. NICHOLSON Director March 31, 1997
- --------------------------
James E. Nicholson


/s/ JAMES A. SAALFIELD Director March 31, 1997
- --------------------------
James A. Saalfield


/s/ THOMAS J. TOY Director March 31, 1997
- --------------------------
Thomas J. Toy




EXHIBIT INDEX

EXHIBIT
NO. DESCRIPTION
- --------- -------------------------------------------------------
11.1 Calculation of earnings per share.
23.1 Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors.
27.1 Financial Data Schedule.




F-14