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Feasibility and Usability of Patch-based Continuous Cardiac Rhythm Monitoring in Comparison with Traditional Telemetry in Noncritically Ill Hospitalized Patients
- Source :
- The Journal of Innovations in Cardiac Rhythm Management
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- MediaSphere Medical LLC, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Research on traditional cardiac telemetry demonstrates that excessive alarms are related to lead failures and noise-related interruptions. Patch-based continuous cardiac rhythm monitoring (CCRM) has emerged in outpatient ambulatory monitoring situations as a means to improve recording fidelity. In this study, patients hospitalized but not in the intensive care unit were simultaneously monitored via telemetry in parallel with the use of the Vital Signs Patchâ„¢ (VSP) CCRM system (LifeWatch Services, Rosemont, IL, USA), applying standardized monitoring and notifications provided by an off-site central monitoring unit (CMU). Among 11 patients (55% male; age: 66.8 ± 12.5 years), there were 42 CMU detections and 98 VSP detections. The VSP device was successfully applied by nursing with connectivity established in all 11 patients (100%). There were no VSP device–related adverse events or skin eruptions during the study. The CMU agreed with 59 (60%) of 98 VSP detections. Among those detections marked by disagreement 30 (77%) of 39 VSP detections were related to clinically meaningful arrhythmias (atrial: n = 9; ventricular: n = 7; brady-: n = 14) undetected by VSP due to noise. In two patients (18%), there were four clinically meaningful atrial fibrillation detections not recorded by the CMU. In conclusion, patch-based CCRM requires further development and review to replace traditional cardiac telemetry monitoring but could evolve into an appropriate method to detect clinically meaningful events missed by traditional methods if noise issues can be mitigated.
- Subjects :
- Alarm fatigue
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry
cardiac telemetry
Cardiac telemetry
Vital signs
Atrial fibrillation
Usability
medicine.disease
Intensive care unit
law.invention
patch monitoring
continuous cardiac monitoring
law
Physiology (medical)
Telemetry
Cardiac rhythm monitoring
Ambulatory
Emergency medicine
Medicine
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
business
Original Research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21563993 and 21563977
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Innovations in Cardiac Rhythm Management
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....845703bbe42d30a8eafdfda9fc7aafb8