At Consumer Electronics Show, UB cardiologist to discuss heart monitoring by smartphone

For some patients with arrhythmias, heart monitor apps are useful

Release Date: January 8, 2019 This content is archived.

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Anne Curtis.
“Using heart monitors can help patients be more engaged in their health and allows them to work with their physicians to have the best outcomes. ”
Anne Curtis
SUNY Distinguished Professor and the Charles and Mary Bauer Chair and Professor of Medicine

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Heart monitor apps designed to detect cardiac arrhythmias are proving beneficial for heart patients, according to a University at Buffalo cardiologist scheduled to speak today at the 2019 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.

“Using heart monitors can help patients be more engaged in their health and allows them to work with their physicians to have the best outcomes,” said Anne B. Curtis, MD, SUNY Distinguished Professor and the Charles and Mary Bauer Chair and Professor of Medicine in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB.

Curtis, who is also president and chief executive officer of UBMD Internal Medicine, is one of the world's leading clinical cardiac electrophysiologists and an expert in cardiac arrhythmias. She has played a key role in developing national treatment guidelines for treating atrial fibrillation (AF), a heart rhythm disorder that, if untreated, puts patients at higher risk for stroke.

In 2017, Curtis conducted a study that found that the Kardia Mobile with the AliveCor smartphone app to diagnose palpitations resulted in better compliance among patients than the 14-to-30-day event monitors that have been standard-of-care for monitoring and detecting arrhythmias. And at the American Heart Association meeting last November, she presented data on a study conducted at nursing homes that found that 7.1 percent of patients with no previous history of AF were found to have it when their heart rhythms were checked with the Kardia Mobile.

Titled “Heart Tech’s Quantum Leap: How Will Physicians Manage the Data?” her talk at CES focuses on how best to make use of heart monitoring data.

In a discussion prior to the CES, Curtis explained that when patients transmit data to her office, her nurse downloads and reviews the data first, followed by her own review and confirmation of the diagnosis reached by the nurse.

“Some patients go overboard and transmit repeatedly every day,” said Curtis. “But that is almost never necessary.”

She added that once an arrhythmia is captured on an electrocardiogram and a diagnosis is made, there is usually no need for additional heart monitoring.

In some patients, she added, a heart monitor will not prove helpful. “For example, if you are in AF all the time, there is nothing to be gained by wearing a monitor,” she said.

“We recommend heart monitors for patients who are having palpitations so we can diagnose what the problem is,” Curtis explained. “Sometimes it is atrial fibrillation, sometimes another type of arrhythmia. For patients already known to have AF, it could help detect recurrences.”

The panel she is scheduled to speak at is sponsored by the Heart Rhythm Society, of which Curtis is a past president.

Media Contact Information

Ellen Goldbaum
News Content Manager
Medicine
Tel: 716-645-4605
goldbaum@buffalo.edu