(Press-News.org) Sophia Antipolis, 20 October 2014. The condition of an athlete's heart has for the first time been accurately monitored throughout the duration of a marathon race. The real-time monitoring was achieved by continuous electrocardiogram (ECG) surveillance and data transfer over the public mobile phone network to a telemedicine centre along the marathon route. This new development in cardiac testing in endurance athletes, said investigators, "would allow instantaneous diagnosis of potentially fatal rhythm disorders".
Following trails in two marathon races, the investigators now describe online ECG surveillance as feasible and "a promising preventive concept". They explain in their first report of the technique how "in the case of life-threatening arrhythmias, the emergency services located along the running track could be alerted to take the runners at risk out of the race and start extended cardiologic diagnostics and treatment".
The investigators, from the Center for Cardiovascular Telemedicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin in Berlin, present their results on Friday (31 October) at the first European Congress on e-Cardiology and e-Health, with a full report published today in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.(1,2)
Proof of the method's concept was achieved during two marathon races in Germany, in each of which five healthy runners (mean age 41.7 years) were equipped with a small ECG device and smart phone worn on the arm. Data transfer between the ECG monitor and phone was by Bluetooth technology. The ECG data were streamed from the device to the investigators' telemedicine centre in Berlin, where the data were monitored live and stored for later analysis.
During the trials all ten participants completed the two marathons without problems (in a mean time of 3h 37min) but there were differences in the quality of ECG streaming. In the first race, with more than 7000 runners and 150,000 spectators, there was virtually no accurate streaming from the ECG device because of errors in both the Bluetooth connection and connectivity of the phone to the mobile phone network.
New software to connect both devices was thus introduced for the second race six months later (with more than 15,000 runners and 300,000 spectators), and the athletes were asked to wear each device (ECG and smart phone) on the same arm. As a result of the changes, the quality of streaming ECG data was "excellent", with mean transfer time for an ECG wave complex measured at just 72 seconds.
Thus, on this second attempt feasibility was demonstrated in the two essential parameters: rapid transfer time of ECG data; and the continuity of ECG information between individual mobile phones and the medical centre.
Next on the agenda, say the investigators, is a miniaturised ECG device "to improve comfort and acceptance". And generally, they add, the system should ideally "be able to transmit ECG signals reliably, even under extreme conditions, such as running, with extensive body movements of the sweating athletes. Moreover, there should be no interruption in ECG data transfer within a mobile phone network, even under the condition of an extreme workload caused by thousands of mobile phone customers (athletes and spectators) allocated in a very limited geographical area".
As background to the study the investigators note that sudden cardiac death is rare - though not unknown - among marathon runners and other endurance athletes. In 2012 one 42-year-old runner died at the end of the London marathon, the event's second death in three years. All such tragic events are widely publicised - as in the case of UK soccer player Fabrice Muamba, whose heart stopped for 78 minutes during a televised game in 2012 - and raise inevitable questions about cardiovascular evaluation in endurance sports. In Italy, for example, the risk of sudden cardiac death is now considered so real that preparticipation screening (with ECG) is obligatory in all athletes and sports players.
This study's principal investigator Professor Friedrich Köhler confirmed that the risk of sudden cardiac death in endurance running is indeed "low", citing a 2012 study in which the incidence of cardiac arrests was put at 0.54 per 100,000 runners. However, he added that preparticipation screening is not able to detect this risk with any certainty.
Now, for real time evaluation to step up from proof of concept to the practical level, there are still technical problems to solve. "First," said Professor Köhler, "we need a way to handle the monitoring of, say, a thousand runners. One solution could be some 'intelligent' IT middleware, which might identify and select all pathological ECG findings for further analysis in the telemedical centre. And second, if the system does signal an abnormal ECG, how do we identify that individual runner at risk among so many runners - and how do we alert the paramedics out on the course?"
Nevertheless, the two experiments reported today suggest that the concept works, and Professor Köhler indicated its high public health potential in other areas. "The marathon might be just a first indication for the continuous surveillance of vital parameters with mobile phone technology," he said. "There are opportunities in other endurance sports and even in other fields - perhaps in the drivers of high speed express trains."
INFORMATION:
Eating Mediterranean or DASH-style diets, regularly engaging in physical activity and keeping your blood pressure under control can lower your risk of a first-time stroke, according to updated AHA/ASA guideline published in the American Heart Association's journal Stroke.
"We have a huge opportunity to improve how we prevent new strokes, because risk factors that can be changed or controlled — especially high blood pressure — account for 90 percent of strokes," said James Meschia, M.D., lead author of the study and professor and chairman of neurology at the ...
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Researchers using a combination of different imaging techniques have found structural abnormalities in the brains of people with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), according to a new study published online in the journal Radiology. The results suggest a potential role for imaging in diagnosing and treating the condition.
CFS is characterized by profound fatigue and "brain fog" that do not improve with bed rest, lasting for at least six months. The condition affects more than 1 million adults and children in the United States, according to the Centers ...
An imaging study by Stanford University School of Medicine investigators has found distinct differences between the brains of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and those of healthy people.
The findings could lead to more definitive diagnoses of the syndrome and may also point to an underlying mechanism in the disease process.
It's not uncommon for CFS patients to face several mischaracterizations of their condition, or even suspicions of hypochondria, before receiving a diagnosis of CFS. The abnormalities identified in the study, to be published Oct. 29 in Radiology, ...
A new study has found that certain prostate cancer medications are linked with an increased risk of dying from heart-related causes in men with congestive heart failure or prior heart attacks. Published in BJU International, the findings will help doctors and patients weigh the benefits and risks of the drugs.
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), which reduces levels of male hormones in the body to prevent them from stimulating cancer cells, is a mainstay of treatment for prostate cancer. Despite its anticancer effects, ADT has been associated with heart problems, including ...
SAN FRANCISCO: A simplified frailty index created by surgeons at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, Mich., is a reliable tool for assessing risk of mortality and serious complications in older patients considering total hip and knee replacement procedures, according to new study findings presented today at the 2014 Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons.
As more seniors stay healthier longer, elective operations such as hip and knee replace-ments are becoming more common. Traditionally, a person's eligibility for surgery has been based ...
SAN FRANCISCO: Delayed treatment for appendicitis can often lead to a ruptured appendix. That's exactly what is more likely to happen to many children in North Carolina if they have to delay getting treatment because of poor access to general surgeons, according to new study findings presented this week at the American College of Surgeons 2014 Clinical Congress.
Appendicitis is a common condition, but previous research has shown that complications from the condition may be directly tied to living in an area without enough general surgeons. Findings from a May 2014 ...
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Enterovirus. Tuberculosis. Cholera. Measles. Various strains of the flu and hepatitis. The number of infectious disease outbreaks and the number of unique illnesses causing them appear to be increasing around the globe, according to a new Brown University analysis of more than 12,000 outbreaks affecting 44 million people worldwide over the last 33 years.
Menacing as that may sound, these preliminary findings also reveal an encouraging trend. On a per capita basis, the impact of the outbreaks is declining. In other words, even ...
Scientists have long sought to identify the specific DNA changes that can trigger new traits, allowing species to adapt. But when animals develop a new trait, are the mutations within the part of the DNA that makes proteins, or, in the master switches that control the gene, modulating its activity to turn on or off?
For development of the embryo, it is usually the master control regions of a gene that dominate, but what about in an adult?
Jasper et al. found that adults play by a different set of rules, relying on the contributions of novel genes---called taxonomically ...
And you thought the sexual battles between people could get weird and fierce? Try ants. In a new study, biologists at the University of Vermont have discovered some queen ants that make sexual bondage into a life and death fight.
In a discovery new to science, their research shows that sexual conflict between two species can drive an evolutionary bedroom-battle royal, leading to competing adaptations in which female ants of one species manage to manhandle sperm away from the unwitting males of a different species during intercourse. The study was published in the October ...
A high milk intake in women and men is not accompanied by a lower risk of fracture and instead may be associated with a higher rate of death, suggests observational research published in The BMJ this week.
This may be explained by the high levels of lactose and galactose (types of sugar) in milk, that have been shown to increase oxidative stress and chronic inflammation in animal studies, say the researchers.
However, they point out that their study can only show an association and cannot prove cause and effect. They say the results "should be interpreted ...