Cardiac Rhythm Monitoring Using Wearables for Clinical Guidance before and after Catheter Ablation.
Henrike Aenne Katrin HillmannSamira SoltaniJohanna Mueller-LeisseStephan HohmannDavid DunckerPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
Mobile health technologies are gaining importance in clinical decision-making. With the capability to monitor the patient's heart rhythm, they have the potential to reduce the time to confirm a diagnosis and therefore are useful in patients eligible for screening of atrial fibrillation as well as in patients with symptoms without documented symptom rhythm correlation. Such is crucial to enable an adequate arrhythmia management including the possibility of a catheter ablation. After ablation, wearables can help to search for recurrences, in symptomatic as well as in asymptomatic patients. Furthermore, those devices can be used to search for concomitant arrhythmias and have the potential to help improving the short- and long-term patient management. The type of wearable as well as the adequate technology has to be chosen carefully for every situation and every individual patient, keeping different aspects in mind. This review aims to describe and to elaborate a potential workflow for the role of wearables for cardiac rhythm monitoring regarding detection and management of arrhythmias before and after cardiac electrophysiological procedures.
Keyphrases
- atrial fibrillation
- catheter ablation
- left atrial
- left atrial appendage
- oral anticoagulants
- end stage renal disease
- heart failure
- case report
- newly diagnosed
- direct oral anticoagulants
- ejection fraction
- heart rate
- left ventricular
- chronic kidney disease
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- decision making
- peritoneal dialysis
- venous thromboembolism
- sleep quality
- acute coronary syndrome
- congenital heart disease
- human health