New PDA Listens To Your Heartbeat 57
Roland Piquepaille writes "CardioNet Inc., a company based in San Diego, has developed a wireless technology to monitor heart patients. According to this Computerworld article, the technology was 'originally developed by Qualcomm Inc. to track and send messages to large truck fleets.' CardioNet's service is initially focused on the 2 million U.S. people suffering from arrhythmia. Each patient is equipped with a PDA-type electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring device connected by a short-range wireless system to electrodes on his chest. Data is sent to his doctor via a built-in cell phone chip. More details, including a diagram and pictures showing how the system works are also available."
well (Score:4, Funny)
Re:well (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it would be more useful for monitoring (heart beat up, irregular - shove into a database, data-mine, look for high risk 'patterns') rather than notifying people of your death.
Re:well (Score:4, Funny)
It won't be a false positive for very long. When the alarm goes off, it'll give you a heart attack
(talk about mrbid humor...)
Re:well (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, there may be false positives/negatives. No machine I know of (and I've heard stories about several) can perfectly predict when someone is going to have a heart attack. There simply are too many variables and too many different varients and types of irregularities for a "one size fits all solution".
As long as the machine passes the ECG it sees to the doctor there should be no problems. If there is a cause for concern in the relayed data, the doctor can talk to the patient via other (non-PDA) means.
Re:well (Score:3, Informative)
No machine that exists can predict when/if a person will have a heart attack. Even a cardiac catherization that allows one to visualize the coronary arteries can't predict this... which is kinda cool.
Heart attacks usually occur when a clot forms on a previous plaque in one of the vessels feeding the heart. Logicially you would think that the tighter and bigger the plaque, th
Licensing agreement (Score:1)
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Hit [F8] to agree with the preceding terms
Re:well (Score:1)
Re:well (Score:3, Informative)
By itself, arrhythmia is not particularly serious; however, it can have serious secondary effects. Basically arrhythmia messes up the circulation of blood, which can lead to blood clots (because of pools of blood that aren't moving), which can lead to stroke, which is serious.
I'm currently on
Re:well (Score:2)
The more we study electrophysiology, the more we realize that more and more patients will really gain from pacemakers and AICDs (shock boxes).
Routine ECG and BP monitoring for a couple of days per year may one day be an effective scr
Re:well (Score:1)
I want one (Score:5, Funny)
PERSONAL DIGITAL ASSISTANT (Score:1, Interesting)
Only one problem... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Only one problem... (Score:1)
Ironically enough, one of the problems they can cause is noise in ECG traces.
BSD (Score:4, Funny)
Real world blood pressure? (Score:1, Interesting)
Aex.
Re:Real world blood pressure? (Score:1)
Alex.
Don't use any Microsoft programs... (Score:4, Funny)
Clippy: It seems you're having a heart attack... Do you want me to call for help?
Handspring (Score:1)
Possibilities (Score:3, Insightful)
love tester (Score:2, Funny)
PDA resus (Score:1)
Bluetooth (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bluetooth (Score:1, Funny)
[information message box pops up]
Windows has detected that the device "Human Heart" has not been properly signed. To protect you, the device has been terminated. Please reboot PocketPC.
Dangerous for nerds (Score:4, Funny)
Doctor: Now, Poindexter, I've just set this PDA up...
PDA: Thump... thump... thump...
Doctor: And I'm giving it to you.
PDA: Kathump...kathump...kathump...
Doctor: As well as the regular functions, it's got a few more...
PDA: KathumpKathumpKathump
Doctor:It records your heartbeat, for instance
PDA: KathumpityKathumpityKathumpity
Doctor: Oh. 180? That can't be right. It musn't work. Here, take this stopwatch, and sms me with your pulse every half an hour.
PDA: Beeeeeeeeeeeeeeep
A net-connected holter monitor (Score:2)
This is a great idea for parents. (Score:5, Funny)
Where will it end (Score:1)
Rate of Transfer (Score:2)
Great way to keep people from roaming... (Score:2)
Similar story.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Amazing the amount of work required to get that accepted by the medical establishment.
I would imagine his solution, because it does not require special hardware (for the PDA) would be more affordable.
Can you hear me now (Score:5, Funny)
Can you hear my heart beat now *dub* *dub*
Can you hear it now. *dub* *dub*
Can you hear it now. *silence*... OH MY GOD THEY KILLED KENNY
YOU BAS...Naah, just lost the signal there for a while.
Finally (Score:1)
Spyware (Score:3, Funny)
Spyware will now know just what great discount offers really excite you, and can report those back so you then get spammed with more such offers (until you finally have a heart attack).
Listens To Your Heart...? (Score:1)
Sounds like Vitaphone (Score:1)
It need not to be a heart attack (Score:1)
PROGRESS! I love it! Embedded Systems (Score:3, Informative)
Way back when I was just out of medical technology school, there was an article about the possibility of having all the lab machines hooked up to a mainframe that would control them, perhaps by the year 2000. (we had sophisticated, but pure analog eqiupment) That was just about the time Intel released the 8008, then the 8080. The first computer controlled lab equipment rolled in the door in early 1975, and by the late 1970s we were fully wired, with a network of PDP8s.
The diagnostic difficulty with cardiac arrythmias is that they are intermittent ... the chances of having one show up in the cardiologist's office is slim to none.
Then they developed the "Holter" monitor ... huge, battery operated thing that could be pushed around the wards by inpatients.
Then it was battery operated and in a fanny pack, and you wore electrodes for a few days, periodically hooking it to a special phone device to transmitted data. (similar device is/was used for high-risk pregnancies - they have a special belt to spot early labor contractions so mum-to-be can come in if needed)
Now it's continuous monitoring with something embedded that is smart enough to email the doc ... if it can make it through all that spam. There are remote embedded defibrillators. It's apparently like being kicked by a mule when it gets activated by your heart malfunctioning.
Analysis, too! (Score:1)
However the belt-worn device does more than simply sen