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The new stethophone can record heartbeats and breathing then ship the data to your doctor

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by Hala, Oct 28, 2014.

  1. Hala

    Hala Golden Member Verified Doctor

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    Washington— An asthma attack can be a terrifying experience. One minute you’re fine, and the next you are fighting to breathe. Annika Urban, 13, found out firsthand that symptoms come and go very quickly. The teen decided to invent a device to record the sounds of asthma as they occur. She and other patients could then upload them to a computer and send them to their doctors.

    The goal is to be able to alert doctors when a distant patient is having an attack. In some instances, this could decrease the time it takes to diagnose the disease and help patients get the proper medicine.

    Annika showed off her invention at a competition in Washington, D.C., known as the Broadcom MASTERS (for Math, Applied Science, Technology and Engineering for Rising Stars). Society for Science & the Public runs the annual science competition, which is sponsored by Broadcom (a company that makes components to help you access the Internet wirelessly). The competition lets middle school students from around the United States share their science projects and inventions with each other and the public.


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    Annika is a student and cross-country runner at Dorseyville Middle School in Pittsburgh, Pa. She was diagnosed with exercise-induced asthma two years ago. But it took her doctors a long time to confirm her disease because its symptoms often disappeared before the girl got to her doctor’s office.


    Asthma is a disease that causes the lungs’ airways to become inflamed and swollen. Mucus can build up. Muscles around the airways tighten, limiting how much air can flow in and out of the lungs. During an asthma attack, people may cough, wheeze or feel that they can’t get air out of their lungs. In the United States alone, more than 25 million people suffer from asthma.

    But its symptoms can emerge and disappear quickly. As a result, many patients will no longer be wheezing by the time they see a doctor. This can make it hard for doctors to diagnose the disease.

    Annika’s new device might help speed those diagnoses. Her “stethophone” is a stethoscope — a device that detects heartbeats — paired with a microphone. Users can plug it into a smartphone or tablet computer. When someone has trouble breathing, the invention can store sounds of his or her breathing and heartbeat. Later, the patient can then send those recordings over the Internet to a doctor.

    Designing the stethophone wasn’t easy. Annika found the microphone built into smartphones and iPads would not work for this application. “One of the first steps I went through was creating the device with a simple microphone and an iPad,” she says. “I was able to hear breath sounds but I was not able to hear a heartbeat.”

    The teen realized she needed a more powerful microphone. She borrowed a very high quality one from her father, Nathan Urban. He’s a brain scientist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. His microphone easily picked up both the heartbeat and breathing sounds. But it was far too expensive for patients to buy for their personal use.

    Annika knew she would need to boost the sound signal between the microphone and her iPad. The solution she came up with: a guitar amplifier. “I was able to hear heart and breath sounds extremely well and I sent these sounds to a doctor,” she says. “He was amazed at the sound quality and said it sounded like a regular stethoscope.”

    The teen already has plans to improve her device. “I’d like to make an app to show the user how to record sounds, where to place the stethoscope and how to send it to the doctor,” she says. Annika hopes her device one day will find use all over the world. From battlefields to homes, it might quickly send symptoms for analysis by a doctor far away.

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