Heartbuds: A Remote Stethoscope

Margot Kim Image
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Heartbuds: A Remote Stethoscope
It's used by almost every doctor who has ever practiced medicine. But after two centuries of use, the stethoscope is finally getting an update that can help in the doctor's office ... or from half-way around the world.

ORLANDO, Fla. (KFSN) -- It's used by almost every doctor who has ever practiced medicine. But after two centuries of use, the stethoscope is finally getting an update that can help in the doctor's office ... or from half-way around the world.

Thanks to his trusted stethoscope, Cardiologist at Orlando Health, Arnold Einhorn, MD, has detected tell-tale hints of missed beats or leaky lungs for a quarter century.

Dr. Einhorn told Ivanhoe, "It can tell you about the lungs; it can tell you about the heart, it can tell you about the abdomen, it can tell you about the blood vessels in the neck."

Embarrassment is the major reason the first stethoscope was invented 200 years ago. A French physician created it so he didn't have to listen to a woman's heart by placing his ear on her chest. But until now, the secrets unveiled by the stethoscope could only be transmitted to the doctor listening in.

"It can't communicate with someone half-way around the world, but we can," Dr. Einhorn said.

They can, because of Heartbuds, a new electronic version of the stethoscope. Not yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration, Heartbuds are connected to a smart phone's app ... allowing doctors to monitor hearts in the office or patients can record their own vital signs at home and then send them to the doctor.

Dr. Einhorn explained, "You can remotely listen to someone's heart and if someone's got heart failure or has pneumonia and want to listen to the lungs and the heart we can do that now via this electronic stethoscope."

Studies already conducted by the Orlando Health inventors conclude the Heartbuds are more sensitive and accurate than many cheaper conventional stethoscopes often found in American hospitals.

Once it's approved by the FDA, the doctors who invented it see multiple uses for the Heartbuds, including having expecting mothers monitor the heart and heartbeats of their fetuses.