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Near real-time echocardiography teleconsultation using low bandwidth and MPEG-4 compression: feasibility, image adequacy and clinical implications
- Source :
- Journal of telemedicine and telecare. 18(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- We assessed the feasibility, image adequacy and clinical utility of a tele-echocardiography service which combined video compression with low-bandwidth store-and-forward transmission. Echocardiograms were acquired by a hospital geriatrician, compressed and transmitted using both near real-time (urgent) and delayed (pre-programmed) protocols via an Internet connection to the notebook PC of a remote cardiologist. Clinical utility was evaluated as a change in therapeutic management. During a one-year period, 101 tele-echocardiography consultations were successfully performed (feasibility = 100%) on 95 patients (age 22–95 years), admitted with cardiovascular or neurological diagnoses (24% of the consultations were urgent). In total, 4617 files (1.4 GByte of data) were transmitted, 2669 of which were short video clips. On average, 46 files (13.8 MByte) were transmitted (mean duration 10 min) at each examination. Consultations (both urgent and pre-programmed) were clinically useful in 83% of examinations. Logistic regression analysis showed that both a low left ventricular systolic function and the examination indication were determinants of clinical utility. The transmitted images were considered adequate for diagnosis in 100% of the pre-programmed teleconsultations. Tele-echocardiography using MPEG-4 video compression is a feasible, adequate and clinically useful tool for telemedicine.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Computer science
Real-time computing
Health Informatics
Young Adult
MPEG-4
Humans
Telemetry
Prospective Studies
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Internet
Remote Consultation
Bandwidth (signal processing)
Reproducibility of Results
computer.file_format
Middle Aged
Data Compression
Logistic Models
Cardiovascular Diseases
Echocardiography
Female
Nervous System Diseases
computer
Data compression
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17581109
- Volume :
- 18
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of telemedicine and telecare
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bc9fe3a6a0d4be350751c77ae87fddbb