Santa Fe New Mexican

Apps and high-tech rivals pose threat to stethoscop­es

Hand-held devices, ultrasound scanners allow doctors to watch body in motion and see things like leaky valves, proponents say

- By Lindsey Tanner

TCHICAGO wo centuries after its invention, the stethoscop­e — the very symbol of the medical profession — is facing an uncertain prognosis.

It is threatened by hand-held devices that are also pressed against the chest but rely on ultrasound technology, artificial intelligen­ce and smartphone apps instead of doctors’ ears to help detect leaks, murmurs, abnormal rhythms and other problems in the heart, lungs and elsewhere. Some of these instrument­s can yield images of the beating heart or create electrocar­diogram graphs.

Dr. Eric Topol, a world-renowned cardiologi­st, considers the stethoscop­e obsolete, nothing more than a pair of “rubber tubes.”

It “was OK for 200 years,” Topol said. But “we need to go beyond that. We can do better.”

In a longstandi­ng tradition, nearly every U.S. medical school presents incoming students with a white coat and stethoscop­e to launch their careers. It’s more than symbolic — stethoscop­e skills are still taught, and proficienc­y is required for doctors to get their licenses.

Over the last decade, though, the tech industry has downsized ultrasound scanners into devices resembling TV remotes. It has also created digital stethoscop­es that can be paired with smartphone­s to create moving pictures and readouts.

Proponents say these devices are nearly as easy to use as stethoscop­es and allow doctors to watch the body in motion and actually see things such as leaky valves. “There’s no reason you would listen to sounds when you can see everything,” Topol said.

At many medical schools, it’s the newer devices that really get students’ hearts pumping.

“Wow!” ”Whoa!” “This is awesome,” Indiana University medical students exclaimed in a recent class as they learned how to use a hand-held ultrasound device on a classmate, watching images of his lub-dubbing heart on a tablet screen.

The Butterfly iQ device, made by Guilford, Conn.-based Butterfly Network Inc., went on the market last year. An update will include artificial intelligen­ce to help users position the probe and interpret the images.

Students at the Indianapol­is-based medical school, one of the nation’s largest, learn stethoscop­e skills but also get training in hand-held ultrasound in a program launched there last year by Dr. Paul Wallach, an executive associate dean. He created a similar program five years ago at the Medical College of Georgia and predicts that within the next decade, hand-held ultrasound devices will become part of the routine physical exam, just like the reflex hammer.

The devices advance “our ability to take peek under the skin into the body,” he said. But Wallach added that, unlike some of his colleagues, he isn’t ready to declare the stethoscop­e dead. He envisions the next generation of physicians wearing “a stethoscop­e around the neck and an ultrasound in the pocket.”

Modern-day stethoscop­es bear little resemblanc­e to the first stethoscop­e, invented in the early 1800s by Frenchman Rene Laennec, but they work essentiall­y the same way.

Laennec’s creation was a hollow tube of wood, almost a foot long, that made it easier to hear heart and lung sounds than pressing an ear against the chest. Rubber tubes, earpieces and the often cold metal attachment that is placed against the chest came later, helping to amplify the sounds.

When the stethoscop­e is pressed against the body, sound waves make the diaphragm — the flat metal disc part of the device — and the bell-shaped underside vibrate. That channels the sound waves up through the tubes to the ears. Convention­al stethoscop­es typically cost under $200, compared with at least a few thousand dollars for some of the high-tech devices. But picking up and interpreti­ng body sounds is subjective and requires a sensitive ear — and a trained one.

With medical advances and competing devices over the past few decades, “the old stethoscop­e is kind of falling on hard times in terms of rigorous training,” said Dr. James Thomas, a cardiologi­st at Northweste­rn Medicine in Chicago. “Some recent studies have shown that graduates in internal medicine and emergency medicine may miss as many of half of murmurs using a stethoscop­e.”

Northweste­rn is involved in testing new technology created by Eko, a Berkeley, Calif.-based maker of smart stethoscop­es. To improve detection of heart murmurs, Eko is developing artificial intelligen­ce algorithms for its devices, using recordings of thousands of heartbeats. The devices produce a screen message telling the doctor whether the heart sounds are normal or if murmurs are present.

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 ?? HARRIS & EWING/LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo circa 1920, a doctor examines a child with a stethoscop­e in the United States. Two centuries after its invention, the stethoscop­e is facing an uncertain prognosis with the rise of new technology.
HARRIS & EWING/LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo circa 1920, a doctor examines a child with a stethoscop­e in the United States. Two centuries after its invention, the stethoscop­e is facing an uncertain prognosis with the rise of new technology.

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