Smartphones are revolutionizing
the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses, thanks to add-ons and apps that make
their ubiquitous small screens into medical devices, researchers say.
"If you look at the camera,
the flash, the microphone... they all are getting better and better," said
Shwetak Patel, engineering professor at the University of Washington.
"In fact the capabilities on
those phones are as great as some of the specialized devices," he told the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting this
week.
Smartphones can already act as
pedometers, count calories and measure heartbeats.
But mobile devices and tablets can
also become tools for diagnosing illness.
"You can use the microphone
to diagnose asthma, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder)," Patel
said.
"With these enabling
technologies you can manage chronic diseases outside of the clinic and with a
non-invasive clinical tool."
It is also possible to use the
camera and flash on a mobile phone to diagnose blood disorders, including iron
and hemoglobin deficiency.
"You put your finger over the
camera flash and it gives you a result that shows the level of hemoglobin in
the blood," Patel said.
An app called HemaApp was shown to
perform comparably well as a non-smartphone device
for measuring hemoglobin without a needle. Researchers are seeking approval
from the US Food and Drug Administration for its wider use.
Smartphones can also be used to
diagnose osteoporosis, a bone disorder common in the elderly.
Just hold a smartphone, turn on
the right app in hand and tap on your elbow.
"Your phone's motion picture
sensor picks up the resonances that are generated," Patel said.
"If there is a reduction in
density of the bone, the frequency changes, which is the same as you will have
in an osteoporosis bone."
Such advances can empower patients
to better manage their own care, Patel said.
"You can imagine the broader
impact of this in developing countries where screening tools like this in the
primary care offices are non-existent," he told reporters.
"So it really changes the way
we diagnose, treat and manage chronic diseases."
Lower costs
Mobile smartphone devices are
already helping patients manage cancer and diabetes, says Elizabeth Mynatt,
professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
"Someone who is newly
diagnosed with diabetes really needs to become their own detectives," she
said.
"They need to learn the
changes they need to make in their daily lifestyle."
For women newly diagnosed with
breast cancer, researchers provided a tablet that allows them real-time access
to information on the diagnosis, management of their treatment and side
effects.
The technique also helps patients
who may not be able to travel to a medical office for regular care, reducing
their costs.
"Our tool becomes a personal
support system," Mynatt said. "They can interact to get day-to-day
advice." Research has shown this approach
"changes dramatically their behavior," she added.
"The pervasiveness of the
adoption of mobile platform is quite encouraging for grappling with pervasive
socio-economic determinants in terms of healthcare disparities."
A growing number of doctors and
researchers are turning to smartphones for use in their daily work, seeing them
as a useful tool for managing electronic health data and figuring out the most
effective clinical trials, said Gregory Hager, professor of computer science at
Johns Hopkins University.
Clinical trials currently cost
around $12 million to run from start to finish, he said.
"The new idea is
micro-randomized trials, which should be far more effective, with more natural
data," he said.
Although the costs could be
dramatically lower, too, the field is still new and more work needs to be done
to figure out how to fully assess the quality and the effectiveness of such
trials.
Source: https://phys.org/news
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