• DocumentCode
    3684352
  • Title

    SEEQ MCT wearable sensor performance correlated to skin irritation and temperature

  • Author

    Jonathan M. Engel;Brett Landrum Niranjan Chakravarthy;Dustin Rothwell;Abhi Chavan

  • Author_Institution
    Medtronic Monitoring, Inc, Saint Paul, MN 55108 USA
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    2030
  • Lastpage
    2033
  • Abstract
    The Medtronic SEEQ Mobile Cardiac Telemetry System provides continuous monitoring of symptomatic and asymptomatic cardiac arrhythmias. Deployed across disparate geographies, the device and the patients wearing it are subject to a wide range of weather conditions, specifically differing temperatures. We hypothesized that extremes of temperature would result in degradation of SEEQ system performance due to patient discomfort, perspiration, and other factors. Towards that end, we investigated data from over 5000 devices worldwide, including those linked to patient complaints for discomfort. We found that the data does not show a degradation of wearable performance as defined by artifact or event rate with temperature. However, there was a correlation between patient complaints of discomfort and degraded performance as well as a weak correlation with reduced system longevity at temperatures above 80° F.
  • Keywords
    "Temperature sensors","Wearable sensors","Performance evaluation","Biomedical monitoring","Skin","Monitoring","Temperature distribution"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • ISSN
    1094-687X
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1558-4615
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/EMBC.2015.7318785
  • Filename
    7318785