The integration of smartwatches into postoperative cardiac care transforms patient monitoring, systematically tracking vital signs and delivering real-time data to a centralized platform. This study focuses on developing a platform for seamless integration, assessing reliability, and evaluating the impact on post-cardiac surgery. The goal is to establish a robust foundation for understanding the efficacy and dependability of smartwatch-based telemonitoring, enhancing care for this population.
A total of 108 cardiac surgery patients were divided into telemonitoring (TLM) and control (CTL) groups. The TLM group utilized smartwatches for continuous monitoring of vital parameters (SpO2, HR, BP, ECG) over 30 ± 3 days. Statistical analyses (Pearson, Intraclass Correlation, Bland-Altman, Tost Test) were employed to compare smartwatch measurements with traditional methods. Significant correlations and concordance were observed, particularly in HR and BP measurements. Challenges were noted in SpO2 measurement. The ECG algorithm exhibited substantial agreement with cardiologists (Kappa: 0.794;
The integration of smartwatches into remote telemonitoring for postoperative cardiac care demonstrates substantial potential, improving monitoring and early complication detection, thereby enhancing patient outcomes. The FAPO-X Study (Assisted Digital Telemonitoring with Wearables in Patients After Cardiovascular Surgery; NCT05966857) underscores the promising role of telemonitoring in postoperative cardiac care.