Newswise, June 27, 2017– Doctors at The
Ohio State University Richard M. Ross Heart Hospital are testing a high-tech vest which measures fluid
inside the lungs from outside a person’s clothing. It could be a new way to
prevent repeated trips to the hospital for the nearly six million Americans
living with heart failure.
The SensiVest, created by Sensible Medical, uses radar technology that was first used by the
military and rescue teams to see through walls and rubble in collapsed
buildings.
“Now the technology has been
miniaturized and put into a form that allows the radar to go through the chest
wall and get an accurate measurement of water inside the lungs,” said Dr. William Abraham, director of the Division
of Cardiovascular Medicine at Ohio State Wexner
Medical Center. “With heart failure,
the heart isn’t strong enough to keep up with the body’s needs and fluid stays
in the lungs. Too much fluid makes it hard to breathe.”
Until now, cardiologists haven’t had
a non-invasive way to proactively monitor for fluid changes. The standard has
been to rely on patients weighing themselves daily and reporting symptoms such
as swelling or shortness of breath. By then, it could be serious enough to
require treatment in the hospital.
“We’ve learned these methods don’t
catch the disease progression early enough, and that’s why hospitalization and
re-hospitalization rates for heart failure have changed very little in the last
20 to 30 years,” Abraham said.
So doctors are testing the vest in a
national, randomized clinical trial
to see if it effectively monitors and manages lung fluid, reduces
hospitalizations and improves quality of life. Abraham leads the trial that
includes approximately 40 sites across the country.
All patients enrolled in the trial
receive the highest standard of care for heart failure. Those randomized to the
treatment group will also use the lung fluid monitor at home to take daily
readings. The vest is worn over clothing and a reading takes approximately 90
seconds. The data is uploaded to a secure server where the patient’s
cardiologist or nurse can review it.
“We can use that data to see when
the lungs are trending towards being too wet and make adjustments to the
medication on an outpatient basis or over the phone,” said Dr. Rami Kahwash,
director of the Heart and Vascular Research Organization and site leader for
the trial at Ohio State. “The goal is to keep the patient within a normal
range, feeling well and out of the hospital.”
A previous, small observational study compared hospitalizations before and after using
the vest. That study showed an 87 percent reduction in heart failure
hospitalizations with vest lung fluid monitoring.
Kenny McIntyre, 59, of Columbus, has
been hospitalized twice in the three months since he was diagnosed with heart
failure. He recently joined the trial and says the vest is easy to use.
“I’m the type that, unless something
hurts me, I don’t want to go to a doctor,” McIntyre said. “I just put the vest
on, lay back, hit a button, and let it take my measurements. Every now and then
they alter my medications."
Patients in the trial will be
followed for up to nine months.
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