Publication | Open Access
Enabling Heart Self-Monitoring for All and for AAL—Portable Device within a Complete Telemedicine System
14
Citations
28
References
2019
Year
Medical MonitoringHeart FailureEngineeringRemote Patient MonitoringAal—portable DeviceWearable TechnologyComplete Telemedicine SystemBiomedical EngineeringEcg MonitoringElectrophysiological EvaluationDigital HealthPatient MonitoringHeart Self-monitoringTelehealthCardiologyWireless TelemedicineMedicineImplantable DevicesHeart RhythmBiomedical SensorsCardiovascular DiseaseHealth MonitoringElectrophysiologyChronic Heart-related DiseasesMedical DevicesWearable SensorEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
During the last decades there has been a rapidly growing elderly population and the number of patients with chronic heart-related diseases has exploded. Many of them (such as those with congestive heart failure or some types of arrhythmias) require close medical supervision, thus imposing a big burden on healthcare costs in most western economies. Specifically, continuous or frequent Arterial Blood Pressure (ABP) and electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring are important tools in the follow-up of many of these patients. In this work, we present a novel remote non-ambulatory and clinically validated heart self-monitoring system, which allows ABP and ECG monitoring to effectively identify clinically relevant arrhythmias. The system integrates digital transmission of the ECG and tensiometer measurements, within a patient-comfortable support, easy to recharge and with a multi-function software, all of them aiming to adapt for elderly people. The main novelty is that both physiological variables (ABP and ECG) are simultaneously measured in an ambulatory environment, which to our best knowledge is not readily available in the clinical market. Different processing techniques were implemented to analyze the heart rhythm, including pause detection, rhythm alterations and atrial fibrillation, hence allowing early detection of these diseases. Our results achieved clinical quality both for in-lab hardware testing and for ambulatory scenario validations. The proposed active assisted living (AAL) Sensor-based system is an end-to-end multidisciplinary system, fully connected to a platform and tested by the clinical team from beginning to end.
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