Through Apple Heart Study, Stanford Medicine researchers show wearable technology can help detect atrial fibrillation
[caption id="attachment_9277" align="aligncenter" width="747"] Press Release[/caption]
Study shows that Apple Watch app can identify heart rhythm irregularities, which can help catch atrial fibrillation.
Wearable technology can safely identify heart rate irregularities that subsequent clinical evaluations confirmed to be atrial fibrillation, reports a study from the?Stanford University School of Medicine?and Apple now published in the?New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).
Atrial fibrillation, a type of irregular heart rhythm, is a leading cause of stroke and hospitalization in the United States, but due to its elusive and often sporadic symptoms, the condition often goes undetected.
With more than 400,000 participants enrolled in eight months, the Apple Heart Study is the largest virtual study to date.
?The study?s findings will help patients and clinicians understand how devices like Apple Watch can play a role in identifying atrial fibrillation, a deadly and often undiagnosed disease,? said?Mintu Turakhia, MD, associate professor of cardiovascular medicine. ?Additionally, these important findings lay the foundation for further research into the use of emerging wearable technologies in clinical practice and demonstrate the unique potential of large-scale app-based studies.?
Turakhia and?Manisha Desai, PhD, professor of medicine and of biomedical data science are the senior authors of the study.?Marco Perez, MD, associate professor of cardiovascular medicine, is the lead author. The study chair is?Kenneth Mahaffey, MD, professor of cardiovascular medicine.