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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Comparison between smartphone electrocardiography and standard three-lead base apex electrocardiography in healthy horses.

Journal:
The Veterinary record
Year:
2020
Authors:
Welch-Huston, Brittany et al.
Affiliation:
The University of Minnesota · United States

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiac arrhythmias are commonly auscultated during routine physical examinations in horses and determining the underlying electrical abnormality using an ECG is important. The most commonly used device is a three-lead base apex system (Televet), however few practitioners carry this for routine visits. With recognition of the utility of smartphone-based ECGs in humans, dogs and ruminants, the AliveCor single-lead bipolar smartphone-based ECG has gained popularity. The objective of this study was to determine if AliveCor and Televet ECG measurements were comparable in healthy horses using multiple observers. METHODS: ECGs were performed on 15 healthy horses simultaneously using the AliveCor and Televet. RESULTS: There was very good to perfect interdevice and interobserver agreement for heart rate and RR interval measurement, and moderate-to-good interdevice and interobserver agreement for detection of non-pathological arrhythmias. Interdevice agreement for measurement of P-wave and QRS duration, QT, PR and T-peak to T-end interval was poor to fair. Interestingly, interobserver agreement for P-wave and QRS duration, QT, PR, and T-peak to T-end interval measurements was fair to good. CONCLUSION: Overall, the AliveCor is comparable to the Televet for heart rate and RR measurement, and for the detection of non-pathogenic arrhythmias with acceptable agreement between observers.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32414909/