Abstract

Telemetry monitoring (conventional cardiac monitoring system [CCMS]) is a universal method for postoperative arrhythmia detection; however, the clinical challenge of alarm fatigue, primarily associated with noise or cable disconnections, persists. The introduction of wireless continuous cardiac monitoring (WCCM) represents a potential solution to enhance recording fidelity. Patients were simultaneously outfitted with both a monitoring device considered the standard of care and a novel adhesive wireless patch. A 48-h cardiac monitoring session with the two devices occurred after cardiac surgery in a unit equipped with a telemetry system. A total of 53 patients with a mean age of 60 ± 17 years were included in the trial. The number of events detected by the two systems was significantly different at 190 versus 174 for the CCMS and the WCCM system, respectively (P < .05). However, the percentage of agreement was not significantly different at 91% versus 88% (P = .37). Events were classified as follows: pause (2 events, 1%), atrial or premature ventricular contractions (18 events, 11%), atrial flutter or fibrillation (76 events, 45%), bradycardia (12 events, 7%), and tachycardia (61 events, 36%). False alarms were significantly more frequent with the CCMS (n = 21) than with the WCCM system (n = 5; P = .002). The study successfully demonstrated the feasibility and usability of wireless monitoring for patients requiring telemetry. The overall results are compelling, as the WCCM system performed satisfactorily, achieving results comparable to those obtained with the CCMS, even with significantly fewer false alarms.

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