Now, physicians can detect heart failure by hearing heart’s sounds
August 11th, 2010 - 1:32 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 11 (ANI): Cardiologists can now diagnose heart failure just by hearing the heart’s sound, all thanks to a new technology called acoustic cardiography.
In a study, a UC emergency medicine physician has concluded that acoustic cardiography, a new technology combining a 12-leed ECG with cardiac acoustic data, can aid physicians in detecting the S3-ultimately increasing the accurate diagnosis of acute heart failure in certain subsets of patients.
The study involved analyzing data from one of the largest emergency department-based trials in acute heart failure, the HEart failure and Audicor technology for Rapid Diagnosis and Initial Treatment (HEARD-IT) multinational trial.
The trial, conducted at nine sites from March to October 2006, measured the diagnostic accuracy provided by adding acoustic cardiography to an emergency medicine physician’s tools.
“The S3 is highly associated with heart failure. So we studied how measuring the presence of the S3 changed physicians’ impressions of what was going on, how it potentially changed their workup and treatment for patients,” said Dr. Sean Collins, UC emergency medicine associate professor and lead author of the study.
In the study, the researchers conducted a secondary analysis on the HEARD-IT results, focusing on specific subgroups of patients presenting a harder diagnostic puzzle.
Those include obese patients, patients with kidney failure and patients with an intermediate level of b-type natriuretic peptide, a biomarker which has been associated with acute heart failure and cardiovascular risk.
They found that adding acoustic cardiography to those patients with indeterminate BNP levels improved diagnostic accuracy 22 percent.
“Our findings suggest we diagnose heart failure only about half the time in these patients without acoustic cardiography,” says Collins. “With it, we improve the accuracy to about 70 percent. It’s pretty helpful in this subset of patients.”
Diagnosing them in the emergency department can put patients on the right pathway to treatment more quickly, says Collins, enabling the physician to streamline further testing and treatment. That’s a particular concern with heart failure patients, he says, because many of these patients have associated conditions, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, that make pinpointing the cause of their emergency department visit more difficult.
While Collins says that the HEARD-IT trial didn’t make the argument for acoustic cardiography to be used in every patient suspected of having heart failure, this secondary analysis suggests it could be helpful in treating these subgroups.
“It shows that we need to get better at listening for the S3 and this study would suggest that if we don’t hear it with our ears, that technology like this might be useful,” said Collins.
The study is available online in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine. (ANI)
- St. Jude to provide latest medical technologies to India - Apr 19, 2012
- Seeing forest and trees could help detect heart problems - Jul 27, 2010
- CT scans can detect gout cases - Nov 07, 2011
- World's smallest ECG machine to be launched in Goa - Feb 04, 2010
- False diagnosis of TB in HIV patients is fatal - May 17, 2010
- 'Good' cholesterol is not always good for health - May 26, 2010
- GE Healthcare to make more diagnostic devices in India (Lead) - Mar 17, 2011
- Wonder mix halves chances of cardiac attack, death - Mar 28, 2012
- Frequent CT scanning for testicular cancer linked to secondary cancers - Mar 31, 2011
- Kidney failure, muscle breakdown linked to kava tea - Apr 28, 2011
- Heart attack risk rises by 60 pc post diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis - Dec 07, 2010
- First step to developing a test for MND - Nov 05, 2010
- 'Smart' lung cancer drug shows promise - Oct 28, 2010
- Diagnostic blood test can successfully identify rare lung disease - Jul 06, 2010
- Top 10 major advances in heart disease in 2010 - Dec 22, 2010
Tags: accurate diagnosis, acoustic data, acute heart failure, analyzing data, b type natriuretic peptide, biomarker, cardiography, cardiologists, cardiovascular risk, diagnostic accuracy, emergency department, emergency medicine physician, hearing heart, heart failure, initial treatment, intermediate level, kidney failure, obese patients, rapid diagnosis, type natriuretic peptide