by Phil Sneiderman
The undergraduates who developed this defibrillator vest included, from left, Quinn Salditch, Caitlin Romanczyk, Melinda Chen, Sandya Subramanian, Ernest So, Billy Kang and Akash Premkumar. Missing from photo: team member Taylor Lam. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
(Medical Xpress)—Johns Hopkins biomedical engineering students have designed a lightweight, easy-to-conceal shirt-like garment to deliver life-saving shocks to patients experiencing serious heart problems. The students say their design improves upon a wearable defibrillator system that is already in use.
Their design changes, the students say, should help persuade patients at risk for sudden cardiac arrest to wear the system around the clock.
"In two studies, up to 20 percent of patients who received the defibrillator garment that's already available did not keep it on all the time because of comfort and appearance issues, problems sleeping in it, and frequent 'maintenance alarms,' which occur when the device does not get a good signal from sensors on the patient's skin," said Sandya Subramanian, a Johns Hopkins junior who led the undergraduate team that built the new prototype. "For our class project, we set out to address these issues and design a device that heart patients would be more likely to wear for longer periods of time—because their lives may depend on it."
Wearable defibrillators, resting against the skin, are designed to detect arrhythmia, an irregular heart rhythm that can cause death in minutes if it is not stopped by controlled jolts of electricity. People who face this higher risk of sudden cardiac arrest include patients who have undergone open-heart surgery and those who have recently survived a heart attack.
The long-term treatment for such patients is to surgically implant a small defibrillator in the chest, similar to a pacemaker. However, the students said, such operations cost roughly $150,000, and it generally takes three months of testing and insurance review to get approval for the costly procedure. During this waiting period, insurance providers usually pay for the rental of an external defibrillator garment to protect the patient. More than 100,000 of these devices have been prescribed in the United States during the last eight years or so that the device has been available.
In students’ prototype defibrillator vest, the conductive textile cloth for the shocking electrodes is sewn into the back of the garment, where the two light gray rectangles can be seen. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
The Johns Hopkins student team was assigned last year to develop a system that would lead to greater compliance among these patients. Their prototype emerged from the undergraduate design team program offered by the Department of Biomedical Engineering, which is shared by the university's School of Medicine and its Whiting School of Engineering.
The defibrillator project was sponsored and mentored by Todd J. Cohen, who earned his undergraduate and medical degrees at Johns Hopkins and who now is director of electrophysiology at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y.
"Our JHU design team students were able to survey electrophysiologists and their patients who wore the currently approved wearable cardioverter defibrillator," Cohen said. "The students' research confirmed my personal findings, namely that the current device has several components that could be improved. The students took this information and with my guidance designed a better mousetrap. The new device incorporates features that should improve patient compliance, ease of use and overall functionality."
In particular, the student replaced the existing chest harness-style garment with a more comfortable vest-like design made of thin, breathable and stretchable fabric, which also is waterproof for easy cleaning. The shirt can be worn unobtrusively beneath the patient's clothing. Its electrical components, capable of delivering a 200-joule shock to stop a deadly arrhythmia, are encased in thin pockets on the sides of the garment. The students also replaced a bulky control box hanging from the patient's waist with a smaller wireless system worn like a watch on the patient's wrist. This controller gives the wearer a 30-second warning to stop an impending shock if the system has been activated by a false alarm.
This blue box, the team’s prototype user interface, is worn on the wrist like a watch. It communicates wirelessly with the garment and displays information on the screen. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
"We did not change any of the science involving how a wearable defibrillator works," said team member Melinda Chen, who recently finished her senior year at Johns Hopkins. "We just changed the form of the device. We pursued a 'slip-on and forget' approach to minimize the user's need to maintain and interact with the device."
The students' prototype has already garnered some attention. It recently won a $10,000 first prize in a competition sponsored by the North American Professionals and Entrepreneurs Council. In that contest, the Johns Hopkins defibrillator group was the only undergraduate team to reach the finals, competing against graduate students and entrants with doctoral and MBA degrees. The team's mentor, electrophysiologist Cohen, said the students' wearable defibrillator prototype was also well received recently by physicians, medical researchers and device makers at the non-competitive Stanford Biodesign Conference.
In May, the student inventors showcased their device at the annual Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering Design Day event, organized by the university's Center for Bioengineering Innovation and Design. The wearable defibrillator project won the Most Innovative Design honor and took first place in the People's Choice Award contest, collecting the most votes from those who attended the event. In addition, Subramanian was selected as the outstanding undergraduate team leader, and team member Caitlin Romanczyk was named outstanding freshman. Other team members were Taylor Lam, Powei (Billy) Kang, Chun Ming (Ernest) So, Akash Premkumar and Quinn Salditch.
The students' have completed preliminary testing at the Johns Hopkins Hospital Simulation Center, using manikins wired to mimic heart patients. The team has obtained a provisional patent covering some of their innovations. Team members plan to continue to refine the prototype and to confer with medical device makers about advancing the project.
Explore further: Student invention delivers better, safer heart shocks
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Student invention delivers better, safer heart shocks
Nov 15, 2013
Johns Hopkins undergraduate students have invented a system to shock a dangerously irregular heart back into normal rhythm more safely and effectively.
Wearable defibrillator can prevent death in people with arrhythmias
Nov 13, 2011
A wearable defibrillator can prevent sudden death in people with dangerous heart arrhythmias, according to research presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2011.
Common test used on heart patients who need defibrillator implants unnecessary, study says
May 08, 2014
New research from McMaster University suggests that a commonly performed test during certain types of heart surgery is not helpful and possibly harmful.
Study helps predict which ARVD patients are at highest risk of sudden cardiac death
Sep 23, 2011
(Medical Xpress) -- Johns Hopkins experts in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) have defined a set of criteria that could be used to assess a patient’s need for an implanted defibrillator to prevent sudden ...
First FDA approved subcutaneous implantable defibrillator available for patients
Oct 25, 2012
Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is a condition in which the heart suddenly stops pumping blood. When this occurs, blood stops flowing to the brain and other major organs. Recent estimates show that approximately 850,000 people ...
Recommended for you
Outcomes for older adults with pneumonia who receive treatment including azithromycin
16 hours ago
In a study that included nearly 65,000 older patients hospitalized with pneumonia, treatment that included azithromycin compared with other antibiotics was associated with a significantly lower risk of death and a slightly ...
Implanted heart device linked to increased survival
16 hours ago
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) are associated with improved survival among heart failure patients whose left ventricles only pump 30 to 35 percent of blood out of the heart with each contraction, according ...
Community program helps lower blood pressure among minorities
16 hours ago
Minorities at a higher risk of developing hypertension used a community-based program to significantly lower their blood pressure, researchers said at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research ...
Many breast cancer patients don't get treatment for heart problems
16 hours ago
Only a third of older breast cancer patients saw a cardiologist within 90 days of developing heart problems, in a study presented at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research 2014 Scientific Sessions.
Beta-blockers have no impact on cocaine-related chest pain
17 hours ago
(HealthDay)—For patients with cocaine-associated chest pain, there are no differences in outcome for those treated with or without β-blockers, according to a study published in the June 1 issue of The Am ...
How long is too long to wait for groundbreaking aortic valve replacement surgery?
19 hours ago
Severe aortic stenosis (AS) has a grave prognosis with 25-50% of patients dying within a year once symptoms develop. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) represents a paradigm shift in the therapeutic options for ...
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2014, Science X network
by Phil Sneiderman
The undergraduates who developed this defibrillator vest included, from left, Quinn Salditch, Caitlin Romanczyk, Melinda Chen, Sandya Subramanian, Ernest So, Billy Kang and Akash Premkumar. Missing from photo: team member Taylor Lam. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
(Medical Xpress)—Johns Hopkins biomedical engineering students have designed a lightweight, easy-to-conceal shirt-like garment to deliver life-saving shocks to patients experiencing serious heart problems. The students say their design improves upon a wearable defibrillator system that is already in use.
Their design changes, the students say, should help persuade patients at risk for sudden cardiac arrest to wear the system around the clock.
"In two studies, up to 20 percent of patients who received the defibrillator garment that's already available did not keep it on all the time because of comfort and appearance issues, problems sleeping in it, and frequent 'maintenance alarms,' which occur when the device does not get a good signal from sensors on the patient's skin," said Sandya Subramanian, a Johns Hopkins junior who led the undergraduate team that built the new prototype. "For our class project, we set out to address these issues and design a device that heart patients would be more likely to wear for longer periods of time—because their lives may depend on it."
Wearable defibrillators, resting against the skin, are designed to detect arrhythmia, an irregular heart rhythm that can cause death in minutes if it is not stopped by controlled jolts of electricity. People who face this higher risk of sudden cardiac arrest include patients who have undergone open-heart surgery and those who have recently survived a heart attack.
The long-term treatment for such patients is to surgically implant a small defibrillator in the chest, similar to a pacemaker. However, the students said, such operations cost roughly $150,000, and it generally takes three months of testing and insurance review to get approval for the costly procedure. During this waiting period, insurance providers usually pay for the rental of an external defibrillator garment to protect the patient. More than 100,000 of these devices have been prescribed in the United States during the last eight years or so that the device has been available.
In students’ prototype defibrillator vest, the conductive textile cloth for the shocking electrodes is sewn into the back of the garment, where the two light gray rectangles can be seen. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
The Johns Hopkins student team was assigned last year to develop a system that would lead to greater compliance among these patients. Their prototype emerged from the undergraduate design team program offered by the Department of Biomedical Engineering, which is shared by the university's School of Medicine and its Whiting School of Engineering.
The defibrillator project was sponsored and mentored by Todd J. Cohen, who earned his undergraduate and medical degrees at Johns Hopkins and who now is director of electrophysiology at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y.
"Our JHU design team students were able to survey electrophysiologists and their patients who wore the currently approved wearable cardioverter defibrillator," Cohen said. "The students' research confirmed my personal findings, namely that the current device has several components that could be improved. The students took this information and with my guidance designed a better mousetrap. The new device incorporates features that should improve patient compliance, ease of use and overall functionality."
In particular, the student replaced the existing chest harness-style garment with a more comfortable vest-like design made of thin, breathable and stretchable fabric, which also is waterproof for easy cleaning. The shirt can be worn unobtrusively beneath the patient's clothing. Its electrical components, capable of delivering a 200-joule shock to stop a deadly arrhythmia, are encased in thin pockets on the sides of the garment. The students also replaced a bulky control box hanging from the patient's waist with a smaller wireless system worn like a watch on the patient's wrist. This controller gives the wearer a 30-second warning to stop an impending shock if the system has been activated by a false alarm.
This blue box, the team’s prototype user interface, is worn on the wrist like a watch. It communicates wirelessly with the garment and displays information on the screen. Credit: Will Kirk/homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
"We did not change any of the science involving how a wearable defibrillator works," said team member Melinda Chen, who recently finished her senior year at Johns Hopkins. "We just changed the form of the device. We pursued a 'slip-on and forget' approach to minimize the user's need to maintain and interact with the device."
The students' prototype has already garnered some attention. It recently won a $10,000 first prize in a competition sponsored by the North American Professionals and Entrepreneurs Council. In that contest, the Johns Hopkins defibrillator group was the only undergraduate team to reach the finals, competing against graduate students and entrants with doctoral and MBA degrees. The team's mentor, electrophysiologist Cohen, said the students' wearable defibrillator prototype was also well received recently by physicians, medical researchers and device makers at the non-competitive Stanford Biodesign Conference.
In May, the student inventors showcased their device at the annual Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering Design Day event, organized by the university's Center for Bioengineering Innovation and Design. The wearable defibrillator project won the Most Innovative Design honor and took first place in the People's Choice Award contest, collecting the most votes from those who attended the event. In addition, Subramanian was selected as the outstanding undergraduate team leader, and team member Caitlin Romanczyk was named outstanding freshman. Other team members were Taylor Lam, Powei (Billy) Kang, Chun Ming (Ernest) So, Akash Premkumar and Quinn Salditch.
The students' have completed preliminary testing at the Johns Hopkins Hospital Simulation Center, using manikins wired to mimic heart patients. The team has obtained a provisional patent covering some of their innovations. Team members plan to continue to refine the prototype and to confer with medical device makers about advancing the project.
Explore further: Student invention delivers better, safer heart shocks
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Student invention delivers better, safer heart shocks
Nov 15, 2013
Johns Hopkins undergraduate students have invented a system to shock a dangerously irregular heart back into normal rhythm more safely and effectively.
Wearable defibrillator can prevent death in people with arrhythmias
Nov 13, 2011
A wearable defibrillator can prevent sudden death in people with dangerous heart arrhythmias, according to research presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2011.
Common test used on heart patients who need defibrillator implants unnecessary, study says
May 08, 2014
New research from McMaster University suggests that a commonly performed test during certain types of heart surgery is not helpful and possibly harmful.
Study helps predict which ARVD patients are at highest risk of sudden cardiac death
Sep 23, 2011
(Medical Xpress) -- Johns Hopkins experts in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) have defined a set of criteria that could be used to assess a patient’s need for an implanted defibrillator to prevent sudden ...
First FDA approved subcutaneous implantable defibrillator available for patients
Oct 25, 2012
Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is a condition in which the heart suddenly stops pumping blood. When this occurs, blood stops flowing to the brain and other major organs. Recent estimates show that approximately 850,000 people ...
Recommended for you
Outcomes for older adults with pneumonia who receive treatment including azithromycin
16 hours ago
In a study that included nearly 65,000 older patients hospitalized with pneumonia, treatment that included azithromycin compared with other antibiotics was associated with a significantly lower risk of death and a slightly ...
Implanted heart device linked to increased survival
16 hours ago
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) are associated with improved survival among heart failure patients whose left ventricles only pump 30 to 35 percent of blood out of the heart with each contraction, according ...
Community program helps lower blood pressure among minorities
16 hours ago
Minorities at a higher risk of developing hypertension used a community-based program to significantly lower their blood pressure, researchers said at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research ...
Many breast cancer patients don't get treatment for heart problems
16 hours ago
Only a third of older breast cancer patients saw a cardiologist within 90 days of developing heart problems, in a study presented at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research 2014 Scientific Sessions.
Beta-blockers have no impact on cocaine-related chest pain
17 hours ago
(HealthDay)—For patients with cocaine-associated chest pain, there are no differences in outcome for those treated with or without β-blockers, according to a study published in the June 1 issue of The Am ...
How long is too long to wait for groundbreaking aortic valve replacement surgery?
19 hours ago
Severe aortic stenosis (AS) has a grave prognosis with 25-50% of patients dying within a year once symptoms develop. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) represents a paradigm shift in the therapeutic options for ...
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2014, Science X network
0 comments:
Post a Comment