News Release

New consumer health care application from Finland

ECG into your mobile

Business Announcement

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

The device allows patients suffering from heart problems to begin recording their ECG as soon as symptoms appear and to send the results to their doctor via email or the internet. The device can also be used in home nursing.

The objective is to launch the device within a year.

Cardiologists use continuous monitoring devices known as Holter monitors to detect irregular heartbeat. In many cases, the patient presents no symptoms during the test and the cause of the problems cannot be established. The Finnish invention is also capable of measuring heart rate variability.

Moreover, the device can be used to detect the symptoms of burnout resulting from work-related stress.

With further development, the device can be adapted to monitoring the sleep patterns of patients suffering from sleep apnea and to warn them of imminent attacks. The device has potential in preventing certain musculoskeletal disorders such as neck, shoulder and lower back pain, tennis elbow and repetitive strain injury, which are common among office workers.

The new Beat2Phone application measures electronic heart signals not just for the purposes of health but also physical fitness.

The device has a global market, and the number of potential users continues to grow with population ageing. Approximately five per cent of the world's population suffer from arrhythmias or irregular heartbeat. Irregular heartbeat often develops with age: Approximately 12 per cent of people over the age of 60 suffer from the condition.

The number of people interested in endurance sports is also rising. It has been estimated that approximately one per cent of the population in the Western world actively engage in endurance sports.

Athletes need to monitor their heart signals when training near the peak of their capacity in order to detect any symptoms of overtraining. Conditions associated with overtraining, such as palpitations and irregular heartbeat, can be prevented with the help of this effective personal heart rate monitoring device.

The device measures ECG signals at a sufficiently high sampling rate, identifies individual heart beats and counts the interval between consecutive beats. The device is also equipped with an accelerometer. The signals are sent to a smart phone via Bluetooth. The application displays ECG, heart rate and its variability. The signal from the accelerometer can also be used as a step counter.

Beat2Phone is the first device and software application developed for Android phones that can be used to measure and save an ECG and to perform an extensive analysis of the data. The device also enables an advanced heart rate analysis, and GPS-based speed and distance measurements. Compared to wristband devices, smart phones represent the best available user interface technology.

Mobile phones have evolved into pocket computers with memory capacity, clock rate, computing power and user interface technology comparable to desktop computers of just a few years ago. Smart phones have the capacity for easy storage of digital information and for transmitting it to service providers via the internet.

The prices of fast pocket computers are also coming down rapidly. Within five years, smart phones and tablets will replace desktop computers at least in some spheres of life, and almost everyone will be carrying a small and extremely powerful computer.

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Media material: http://www.vtt.fi/news/2013/16052013_beat2phone.jsp?lang=en

For more information, please contact:

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland
Timo Varpula
Technology Manager
Tel. +358 40 581 1134
timo.varpula@vtt.fi

Further information on VTT:

Olli Ernvall
Senior Vice President, Communications
358 20 722 6747
olli.ernvall@vtt.fi
http://www.vtt.fi

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland is a leading multitechnological applied research organization in Northern Europe. VTT creates new technology and science-based innovations in co-operation with domestic and foreign partners. VTT's turnover is EUR 290 million and its personnel totals 3,100.


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