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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New smartphone stethoscope tested for heart checks in dogs and cats

By Vezzosi, T et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2023·Department of Veterinary Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of a new smartphone-based digital stethoscope featuring phonocardiography and electrocardiography in dogs and cats.

Plain-English summary

A study evaluated a new smartphone-based digital stethoscope that can record heart sounds and rhythms in dogs and cats. The device was tested on 99 dogs and 9 cats, comparing its results to traditional methods. It successfully detected heart murmurs and abnormal sounds in many animals, and it provided clear ECG readings for most cases. While it was good at identifying certain heart issues, it sometimes overdiagnosed atrial fibrillation. Overall, this digital stethoscope could be a helpful tool for vets to screen for heart problems in pets.

People also search for: dog heart murmur detection · cat heart disease diagnosis · smartphone stethoscope for pets · atrial fibrillation in dogs · heart rhythm problems in cats

Abstract

This study assessed a new smartphone-based digital stethoscope (DS) featuring simultaneous phonocardiographic and one-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) recording in dogs and cats. The audio files and ECG traces obtained by the device were compared with conventional auscultation and standard ECG. A total of 99 dogs and nine cats were prospectively included. All cases underwent conventional auscultation using an acoustic stethoscope, standard six-lead ECG, standard echocardiography and recordings with the DS. All the audio recordings, phonocardiographic files and ECG traces were then blind reviewed by an expert operator. The agreement between methods was assessed using Cohen's kappa and the Bland-Altman test. Audio recordings were considered interpretable in 90% animals. Substantial agreement was found in the diagnosis of heart murmur (κ = 0.691) and gallop sound (k = 0.740). In nine animals with an echocardiographic diagnosis of heart disease, only the DS detected a heart murmur or gallop sound. ECG traces recorded with the new device were deemed interpretable in 88 % animals. Diagnosis of heart rhythm showed moderate agreement in the identification of atrial fibrillation (k = 0.596). The detection of ventricular premature complexes and bundle branch blocks revealed an almost perfect agreement (k = 1). Overall, the DS showed a good diagnostic accuracy in detecting heart murmurs, gallop sounds, ventricular premature complexes and bundle branch blocks. A clinically relevant overdiagnosis of atrial fibrillation was found but without evidence of false negatives. The DS could represent a useful screening tool for heart sound abnormalities and cardiac arrhythmias..

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37141934/