Abstract

Clinical applications of passive long-term heart rate (HR) monitoring in patients with cardiac arrhythmias include adequate drug titration of atrioventricular (AV) nodal drugs and assessment of medical compliance with treatment. A majority of patients treated with beta-blockers, especially patients with atrial fibrillation (AF), require some degree of drug titration during the first 6 months of treatment to ensure that adequate HR control and medicine compliance has been achieved. Failing to achieve adequate rate control in patients with AF can lead to worsening symptoms, heart failure exacerbations, and potentially tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy. Enabling video-based monitoring during telehealth patient visits could facilitate providers to measure heart rate (HR) without the need for a dedicated home device (smartwatch, SPO2 device, or others). Videoplethysmography (VPG) is a monitoring technology that measures pulse rate by utilizing front-facing cameras embedded in smart devices. VPG provides a remote and contactless cardiac monitoring solution. We conducted a clinical experiment to evaluate the accuracy of VPG in measuring HR while running on two portable devices: Samsung S10 smartphones and S3 tablets. We used a single‑lead ECG to measure the heart rate at the time of the VPG recordings in AF patients. We employed the Bland-Altman method to measure the level of agreement between videoplethysmography and ECG-based measurements of HR. The findings reveal that the mean difference in videoplethysmography and ECG-based heart rate was inferior to 1 bpm across the 2 devices with confidence intervals ranging from 3 to 12 BPM. Our facial video-based HR monitoring solution could assist providers in measuring heart rates in their patients with AF during remote telehealth visits.

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