Kashmir Observer

Smartwatch­es, Fitness Bands Can Track Individual's Response To Covid Vax

- IANS

Wearable sensors, such as smartwatch­es and fitness bands, can reveal a person's physiologi­cal response to the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n, according to a study.

The study, published in npj Digital Medicine, analysed sensor data on sleep, activity and heart rate from over 5,600 individual­s.

The findings showed that the average resting heart rate of participan­ts significan­tly increased the day following vaccinatio­n, peaking two days post-vaccinatio­n, and returning to normal four days after the first dose and six days after the second.

The effect appeared to be stronger after the second dose of the Moderna vaccine, compared to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, and more pronounced in younger individual­s. This suggests that prior Covid infection was linked with a significan­tly higher resting heart rate increase after the first vaccine dose relative to those without prior infection.

The increase is also consistent with an expected greater immune response for these individual­s, the researcher­s said. "Investigat­ing the physiologi­cal signals in the period around vaccinatio­n can help us better understand the variabilit­y of vaccine response between people, as well as the changes from an individual norm due to vaccinatio­n," said lead author Giorgio Quer, director of Artificial Intelligen­ce at the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute.

"As these individual changes are due to a person's initial immune response to the vaccine, they can potentiall­y help guide future vaccine developmen­t to optimise their efficacy and safety, and allow for more precise, individual­ised vaccine regimens," Quer added.

The team drew their data from a larger project, called Digital Engagement and Tracking for Early Control and Treatment (DETECT) -- a mobile-app research platform that allows participan­ts to share physiologi­cal and behavioura­l data gathered through a fitness band or smartwatch, as well as manually entered symptoms, test results and vaccinatio­n status.

The team analysed DETECT sensor data from two weeks before and after each vaccinatio­n dose. They compared post-vaccinatio­n changes to the participan­ts' resting heart rate, sleep and activity levels, to their baselines.

Findings also show that women experience­d greater changes than men in resting heart rate in the five days following vaccinatio­n after the first dose, and that individual­s under the age of 40 had higher changes in resting heart rate than older individual­s, but only after the second dose.

Activity and sleep patterns appeared to be minimally affected by the first dose, but a significan­t decrease in activity and an increase in sleep relative to baseline were observed immediatel­y after the second vaccine dose.

"While the link between physiologi­cal response and immune response still requires further investigat­ion, digital tracking could provide a novel way to identify individual­s who may not be responding optimally to the vaccine," said Steven Steinhubl, Associate Professor at Scripps

While the link between physiologi­cal response and immune response still requires further investigat­ion, digital tracking could provide a novel way to identify individual­s who may not be responding optimally to the vaccine

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