Wireless pacemakers can keep heart patients in touch with docs
September 11th, 2009 - 5:22 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, September 11 (ANI): American doctors have implanted one of the first wireless pacemakers in the country, and the first in the Triad.
Dr. Rick Henderson, an electrophysiologist at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center’s Heart Center, has revealed that the new wireless pacemakers transmit additional information about the patient’s heart with greater frequency.
The expert says that this gives patients the advantage of fewer office visits - often a problem with heart patients living in rural areas - and quicker response to problems.
“The new device gives us information every day. It has the ability to detect changes that are programmed into the device so we can react quickly. It can report 24 hours a day, even when the patient is sleeping,” Henderson said.
According to Henderson, all pacemakers have some type of transtelephonic monitoring system that can send data over a telephone line if needed.
“With the wireless device, we can monitor the patient on a daily basis. The device is set to report back to us any abnormalities such as atrial fibrillation. For example, if a patient is having regular heart rhythm, but is having atrial fibrillation every now and then, the device will pick it up sooner and send the information through a transmitter to the device clinic,” Henderson said.
A report on the doctors’ work suggests that wireless pacemakers are ideal for patients in remote areas who may have prolonged drive times for clinic visits.
It states that where a patient lives, and how far they are from medical centres, will be a factor in who receives the device.
Henderson says that wireless devices will be used more frequently in the future, as well as leadless devices in which the pacemaker does not have to enter the vascular system.
Another future possibility is that wireless devices could be used to monitor blood pressure, reckons Henderson. (ANI)
- Measuring oxidative stress may help predict atrial fibrillation risk - Apr 05, 2011
- Diabetes linked to irregular heartbeat - Apr 23, 2010
- Computerised monitoring systems help doctors save lives - Jun 20, 2010
- Yoga reduces irregular heartbeat and anxiety - Apr 04, 2011
- Delayed-enhancement MRI may predict, prevent strokes - Feb 09, 2011
- Are erratic heartbeats tied to unexplained strokes? - Feb 03, 2012
- World's first remote heart procedure using robotic arm - Nov 16, 2010
- Irregular heart beat plus stroke may increase dementia risk - Mar 08, 2011
- Fish oil does not help with people with heart rhythm problem: Study - Nov 16, 2010
- Tool predicts death probability from stroke - Feb 11, 2011
- The smart phone as diagnostic tool - Oct 07, 2011
- St. Jude Medical launch Accent MRI pacemaker - Jan 17, 2012
- Two new drugs can slash stroke risk - Jan 11, 2011
- Device lowers BP in patients with difficult-to-treat hypertension - Apr 06, 2011
- Healthy lifestyles could halve cases of atrial fibrillation - Mar 29, 2011
Tags: american doctors, baptist medical center, daily basis, dr rick, electrophysiologist, fibrillation, forest university baptist medical, heart center, heart patients, heart rhythm, medical centres, monitoring system, pacemaker, pacemakers, patient lives, rick henderson, university baptist medical center, vascular system, wake forest university, wake forest university baptist medical center