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Medicine Apple

Massive Study Finds Apple Watch Can Detect Undiagnosed Heart Rhythm Problems (engadget.com) 67

An anonymous reader quotes Engadget: Researchers from Stanford University's School of Medicine presented results from a giant study sponsored by Apple Inc. that showed the Apple Watch can sometimes spot patients with undiagnosed heart-rhythm problems, without producing large numbers of false alarms. The Apple-sponsored trial enrolled 419,297 people and was one of the largest heart-screening studies ever.

The study, details of which are being presented today at the American College of Cardiology conference in New Orleans, used the watch's sensors to detect possible atrial fibrillation... People who have atrial fibrillation are at risk of blood clots and strokes. In the U.S., it causes 750,000 hospitalizations a year and contributes to 130,000 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Because it doesn't always produce outward symptoms, it can go undiagnosed. According to results presented Saturday, about 0.5 percent of patients in the study -- or almost 2,100 people -- received notices from their watch indicating that they might have a heart-rhythm problem. That relatively low number showed that the technology wasn't inundating people with worrisome alerts.

People receiving a notification were asked to then wear an ECG (electrocardiography) patch, according to the Verge, adding that Stanford reports "84 percent of the time, participants who received irregular pulse notifications were found to be in atrial fibrillation at the time of the notification."

The dean of Stanford's medical school says the study "opens the door to further research into wearable technologies and how they might be used to prevent disease before it strikes."
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Massive Study Finds Apple Watch Can Detect Undiagnosed Heart Rhythm Problems

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  • Please download my fake defibrillator app. $12.88.

    ,
    And just in time for April 1st, fake heart condition popup warnings that tell you to go to the closest emergency room immediately, spoofing your GPS connection to make you drive in circles.

    Yay technology.

    • Probably a great time there are in fact real CPR apps that help [cprcertifi...linehq.com].

      One of the apps alerts people nearby that know CPR an event is happening, so you get quicker response.

      There are also educational apps that help you learn CPR, better than nothing if you are the only one there. Although I do not know which apps do this, it also seems like CPR apps could help with timing of the presses and breathing assist you are supposed to be doing.

      So don't make too light of apps that can help someone having an attack...

  • I suppose it could look up your medical records online, but HIPAA....
    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      It's easy for you ti give consent so HIPAA is not an issue. The problem with looking up your medical record is that looking up medical records is darn near impossible until they become standardized (and don't hold your breath for that or your watch will set off another alarm)
  • That's right, you can have AF and not even know it. As someone who had AF (ablation fixed it, for now...), I found that to be absolutely bizarre. I absolutely knew I was in AF without even taking my pulse, and yet nurses and doctors assured me that there were people who wouldn't know they were in AF.

    The fact that the watch can detect this well enough to tell you that you should talk to your doctor about it, is a big deal.

    You really, really don't want a stroke.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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