Or you could do the expensive testing in the hospital.
https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/05/accurately-detecting-heartattacks-and-strokes-with-apple-watch-and-fitbits.html
Heartbeat measurement app Cardiogram
and the University of California, San Francisco used the Apple Watch
for 97 percent accurate detection the most common abnormal heart rhythm
when paired with an AI-based algorithm.
The study involved 6,158 participants recruited through the
Cardiogram app on Apple Watch. Most of the participants in the UCSF
Health eHeart study had normal EKG readings. However, 200 of them had
been diagnosed with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (an abnormal
heartbeat). Engineers trained a deep neural network to identify these
abnormal heart rhythms from Apple Watch heart rate data.
About a quarter of strokes are caused by an abnormal heart
rhythm, according to Cardiogram co-founder and data scientist for UCSF’s
eHeart study Brandon Ballinger.
Two-thirds of those types of strokes are preventable with relatively inexpensive drugs.
Digital
health company AliveCor and Rochester, MN-based Mayo Clinic are teaming
up to glean new insights from data captured with AliveCor’s mobile ECG
device.
The Mobile EKG sticks onto the back of a smartphone and uses
the Kardia app to determine abnormal heart rhythm, and determined it
was as good as other EKG devices used in the doctor’s office. The Mayo
Clinic felt invested in AliveCor’s latest $30 million round.
Together, the Mountain View, CA-based company and Mayo will
apply AliveCor’s machine learning technology to 10 million ECG
recordings taken by users of the company’s Kardia product, an
FDA-cleared mobile device that pairs with smartphones to measure
electrical activity in the heart. The goal is to “uncover hidden
physiological signals to improve heart and overall human health,”
according to a press release.
In particular, the findings could lead to insights about the
relationship between cardiac arrhythmias and changes in blood potassium
levels, which can indicate kidney failure.
“Working with Mayo Clinic, we are hopeful that soon
physicians will be turning to ECG data for the care of many types of
patients, not just those with typical cardiovascular issues,” Dave
Albert, MD, AliveCor’s chief medical officer, said in the press release.
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