(Karger, 2023) Buelga Suárez, Mauro; Pascual Izco, Marina; Pastor Pueyo, Pablo; Lozano Granero, Cristina; García Montalvo, Jesús; Alonso Salinas, Gonzalo Luis; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun Zientziak
BACKGROUND: Smartwatches have become a widely used tool for health self-care. Its role in ischemic heart disease (IHD) has not been assessed. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the usefulness of smartwatch ECG registry in IHD. METHODS: We present an observational study of 25 consecutive patients with acute IHD. Conventional ECG and smartwatch tracing were obtained simultaneously at admission. Waves of conventional and smartwatch ECGs were objectively compared. A survey on medical attitude was conducted among 12 physicians (3 cardiologists, 3 intensivists, 3 emergency physicians, and 3 general practitioners) and a score (1 to 5) of concordance between the records was requested. RESULTS: There were no differences in Q wave, R wave, ST segment, or T wave. There was a very strong correlation between ST segments, a strong correlation in Q waves and R waves, and a moderate correlation in T wave measurements.All specialists obtained a high level of agreement (4.45 +/- 0.45). Smartwatch tracings would lead to similar management compared to conventional ECG. There were only 6 (2%) discrepant cases due to differences in inferior repolarization, showing an almost perfect agreement (kappa=0.96). CONCLUSIONS: In most patients with acute IHD, smartwatch ECG tracing is a reliable tool to make the diagnosis and guide appropriate medical care. However, due to their intrinsic limitations, inferior myocardial infarctions may be missed and require a conventional 12-lead ECG to rule them out.