Clinical communicationArrhythmia surveillace by transtelephonic monitoring: Comparison with Holter monitoring in symptomatic ambulatory patients
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A brief history of remote cardiac monitoring
2013, Cardiac Electrophysiology ClinicsCitation Excerpt :TTM is a technology introduced in the early 1970s and has been, until this decade, the predominant method of remote pacemaker follow-up. It is also the basis for arrhythmia surveillance for the first generation of patient-activated event monitors.9 This technology converts ECG information into sound, to communicate over telephone lines to a decoding machine, which changes the sound back into a “rhythm strip”.
Ambulatory patient-activated arrhythmia monitoring: Comparison of a new wrist-applied monitor with a conventional precordial device
1997, Journal of ElectrocardiologyA cost-effectiveness strategy for transtelephonic arrhythmia monitoring
1995, The American Journal of CardiologyApproach to the patient with palpitations
1995, Medical Clinics of North AmericaEvaluation of the reliability of ST segment monitoring by transtelephonic electrocardiogram transmission
1994, International Journal of CardiologyThe accuracy of symptom reporting by patients complaining of palpitations
1994, The American Journal of Medicine
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Fellow in Cardiology, Rhode Island Hospital; Clinical Fellow, Brown University.
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Associated Physician, Rhode Island Hospital; Assistant Professor of Medicine, Brown University. Dr. Capone is a Teaching Scholar of the American Heart Association.
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