Advanced and Accurate Mobile Health Tracking Devices Record New Cardiac Vital Signs

Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death and disease worldwide. As demands on an already resource-constrained healthcare system intensify, disease prevention in the future will likely depend on out-of-office monitoring of cardiovascular risk factors. Mobile health tracking devices t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979) Tex. 1979), 2018-08, Vol.72 (2), p.503-510
Hauptverfasser: Modena, Brian D, Bellahsen, Otmane, Nikzad, Nima, Chieh, Angela, Parikh, Nathan, Dufek, Danielle Marie, Ebner, Gail, Topol, Eric J, Steinhubl, Steven
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container_title Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979)
container_volume 72
creator Modena, Brian D
Bellahsen, Otmane
Nikzad, Nima
Chieh, Angela
Parikh, Nathan
Dufek, Danielle Marie
Ebner, Gail
Topol, Eric J
Steinhubl, Steven
description Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death and disease worldwide. As demands on an already resource-constrained healthcare system intensify, disease prevention in the future will likely depend on out-of-office monitoring of cardiovascular risk factors. Mobile health tracking devices that can track blood pressure and heart rate, in addition to new cardiac vital signs, such as physical activity level and pulse wave velocity (PWV), offer a promising solution. An initial barrier is the development of accurate and easily-scalable platforms. In this study, we made a customized smartphone app and used mobile health devices to track PWV, blood pressure, heart rate, physical activity, sleep duration, and multiple lifestyle risk factors in ≈250 adults for 17 continual weeks. Eligible participants were identified by a company database and then were consented and enrolled using only a smartphone app, without any special training given. Study participants reported high overall satisfaction, and 73% of participants were able to measure blood pressure and PWV,
doi_str_mv 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.11177
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As demands on an already resource-constrained healthcare system intensify, disease prevention in the future will likely depend on out-of-office monitoring of cardiovascular risk factors. Mobile health tracking devices that can track blood pressure and heart rate, in addition to new cardiac vital signs, such as physical activity level and pulse wave velocity (PWV), offer a promising solution. An initial barrier is the development of accurate and easily-scalable platforms. In this study, we made a customized smartphone app and used mobile health devices to track PWV, blood pressure, heart rate, physical activity, sleep duration, and multiple lifestyle risk factors in ≈250 adults for 17 continual weeks. Eligible participants were identified by a company database and then were consented and enrolled using only a smartphone app, without any special training given. 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source MEDLINE; EZB Electronic Journals Library; American Heart Association; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Blood Pressure - physiology
Blood Pressure Determination - instrumentation
Cardiovascular Diseases - diagnosis
Cardiovascular Diseases - physiopathology
Equipment Design
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Heart Rate - physiology
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Pulse Wave Analysis - instrumentation
Reproducibility of Results
Retrospective Studies
Telemedicine - instrumentation
title Advanced and Accurate Mobile Health Tracking Devices Record New Cardiac Vital Signs
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