| Literature DB >> 33916371 |
David Duncker1, Wern Yew Ding2, Susan Etheridge3, Peter A Noseworthy4,5, Christian Veltmann1, Xiaoxi Yao4,5, T Jared Bunch6, Dhiraj Gupta2.
Abstract
The possibilities and implementation of wearable cardiac monitoring beyond atrial fibrillation are increasing continuously. This review focuses on the real-world use and evolution of these devices for other arrhythmias, cardiovascular diseases and some of their risk factors beyond atrial fibrillation. The management of nonatrial fibrillation arrhythmias represents a broad field of wearable technologies in cardiology using Holter, event recorder, electrocardiogram (ECG) patches, wristbands and textiles. Implementation in other patient cohorts, such as ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), heart failure or sleep apnea, is feasible and expanding. In addition to appropriate accuracy, clinical studies must address the validation of clinical pathways including the appropriate device and clinical decisions resulting from the surrogate assessed.Entities:
Keywords: arrhythmia; artificial intelligence; cardiac monitoring; digital health; heart failure; mobile health; remote monitoring; wearables
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33916371 PMCID: PMC8038592 DOI: 10.3390/s21072539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Types of cardiac monitoring.
| Device | Maximum Duration of Monitoring | Continuous Recording | Event | Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12-lead ECG | Single timepoint | No | No | Easy and cheap method of monitoring; good diagnostic capability if captures arrhythmia |
| Holter monitoring | 72 h | Yes | Yes | Short-term but quantifies burden of arrhythmia |
| Patch monitor | 1–3 weeks | Yes | Yes | Intermediate duration with straightforward application and improved patient compliance |
| External loop recorder | 1 month | No | Yes | Provides long-term monitoring of rare, sustained events |
| Smartphone monitor | Indefinite | No | Yes | Available direct to consumer; inexpensive; provides long-term monitoring of rare, sustained events; requires a Smartphone |
| Mobile cardiac telemetry | 1 month | Yes | Yes | Real-time cardiac monitoring with remote capability; relatively expensive |
| Implantable loop recorder | 3 years | Yes | Yes | Provides long-term monitoring of arrhythmias; requires invasive procedure; relatively expensive |
| Pacemaker or ICD | Indefinite (with box changes) | Yes | Yes | Long-term monitoring with remote capability; able to deliver therapy in certain situations; requires invasive procedure; expensive |
| WCD | Indefinite | Yes | Yes | Very expensive; able to deliver therapy for life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias; dependent on compliance |
| Smart textile-based garments | Indefinite | Yes | Potentially | Rapidly developing field that is yet to be established |
ECG, electrocardiogram; ICD, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; WCD, wearable cardioverter-defibrillator.
Figure 1Generic advantages and disadvantages of wearables for monitoring of cardiac arrhythmia.
Figure 2Examples of photoplethysmography (PPG) recordings for ventricular bigeminy and atrial flutter. The top graph shows PPG signals of a 60-s recording. The bottom-left tachogram displays all consecutive pulse signal intervals. For ventricular bigeminy, it can be seen that there are heart beats with alternating intervals. For atrial flutter, the heart rate is rapid with an average of 146 bpm. The Lorenz plot provides a visual representation for clustering patterns.
Figure 3The figure shows a standard ECG (A) and a compared “12-lead equivalent ECG” (B) from the same patient using 2 electrodes connected to a smartphone associated sensor as shown (C) that obtains multiple sequential single-lead ECG measurements that was used in the St. Leuis trial. A next-generation concept for improved detection from AliveCor (Mountainview, CA, USA) is shown in (D) for smart phone-based cordless detection of STEMI with direct lead equivalents annotated. (Figures (A–C) are courtesy of Dr. Brent Muhlestein and Viet Le. Figure (D) is courtesy of Dr. Dave Alpert).
Surrogates for wearable measurement in heart failure.
| HF Parameter | Method | Device |
|---|---|---|
| Thoracic fluid | Thorax impedance measurement, remote dielectric sensing, seismocardiography | Patch, vest, smart shirt |
| Activity | Pedometers, accelerometers, | Patch, wrist band, smart watch, smart shirt |
| Blood pressure | Sphygmomanometer | Smart watch, wristband |
| Body Weight | Body weight measurement | Smart socks, scale |
| NYHA functional class | Questionnaires, applications | Smart phone, tablet |
| QoL | Questionnaires, applications | Smart phone, tablet |
| Heart rate, heart rhythm | ECG, PPG | Smart watch, wrist band, patch, chest band, smart shirt |
ECG, electrocardiogram; HF, heart failure; NYHA, New York Heart Association; PPG, photoplethysmography; QoL, quality of life.
Figure 4Implementation of wearables may facilitate the transition from hospital-based to home care (created with BioRender.com, accessed on 2 April 2021).