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C.R. Abbruscato, V.P. of Engineering,
American TeleCare, Inc. Eden Prairie, MN telecare@mn.uswest.net;
www.telemed-care.com
The stethoscope was invented in the early 1800s
by Frenchman RenÈ LaÎnnec as a solution to a delicate problem.
Hitherto, physicians listened to heart sounds by pressing their ears to the
patients chest. The young Dr. LaÎnnec was examining a young woman
with symptoms of heart disease. As he reported, "The patients age and sex
did not permit direct application of the ear to the chest." Being desperate,
resourceful
and a flutist
he rolled up a sheaf of paper to form a
tube. Pressing this instead of his ear against her chest (see photo), he not
only preserved her modesty but "was surprised and gratified at being able to
hear the beating of the heart with much greater clearness and distinctness
than
ever before."
The new invention was not quickly adopted. Commentary
in the London Times of 1834 noted, "That it [the stethoscope] will ever come
into general use
is extremely doubtful because its beneficial application
requires much time and gives a good bit of trouble
There is something even
ludicrous in the picture of a gray physician proudly listening through a long
tube applied to the patients thorax." Many wooden and rubber models were
tried, but none caught on until 1852, when Dr. George Cammann of New York
designed a binaural stethoscope which not only transmitted more sound and
blocked out extraneous sounds, but was also the first to resemble todays
instruments.
Early stethoscopes had only a bell chest piece. This
excelled at picking up low frequency sounds, but missed many at higher
frequencies. Several diaphragms were invented to address higher frequencies;
the first efficient bell/diaphragm combination with a revolving stem was
designed in Boston by Dr. Howard Sprague, in 1926. Acoustic stethoscope design
culminated with the lightweight Littman model introduced in 1961, and still the
mainstay of physicians and nurses.
Acoustic stethoscopes are, of course, limited in their
ability to transmit and amplify sound. This problem was addressed in 1910 by
S.G. Brown in London. Mr. Brown was trying to overcome a serious impediment to
long distance telephony: telephone signals degraded rapidly, limiting voice
transmission to about 20 miles. He invented a repeater, amplifier, and
receivers that would allow transmission to 50 miles and more. To demonstrate
their capabilities, he developed the first "Electrical Stethoscope and
Telephone Relay" (see photo), which he found could be "
tuned so
that
the passage of air through the lungs was heard as the roar of the
wind through a forest of trees." He noted further that "
for the sake of
experiment, the sound of the heart has been transmitted over several miles of
telephone line to doctors in various parts of London and
(a)ll of them
reported that the sounds received in the telephone were as good and clear as
when heard locally." He concluded, "This trial proved that it is now possible
for a specialist, say, in London, to examine a patient, say, in the country,
stethoscopically, and to arrive at a correct diagnosis." And so was the first
telestethoscope born.
The concept languished for over fifty years. There
were scattered reports in the 1970s of it use (see References), including
an efficacy report by pioneers Murphy and Bird at Harvards original
telemedicine project. More definitive academic assessment of tele-auscultation
came when Mattioli and his team began publishing their series of studies in
1992. These documented that the technology then current enabled overall
screening accuracy of 89.5% compared to the on-site acoustic standard.
Converting acoustic auscultation sounds to digital
electric signals presents real challenges. [See sidebar: Electronic
Stethoscope Technology]. To assure adequate fidelity in digital processing,
with a sampling rate of 8,000 sample/second and each sample with 12-bit
resolution (the ability to represent one of 4,096 shades of sound
for each sample), would require a digital stream of 96,000 bits/second (96
Kbps). Unfortunately, the fastest modems today run at about 33.6 Kbps.
Sophisticated engineering and new algorithms are increasing the ability to
transmit diagnostic quality sounds over regular phone lines.
References
Brown SG. A telephone relay. J of the Institution of
Electrical Engineers. pp. 590-619; May 5, 1910.
Vaules DW. Auscultation by telephone (letter). NEJM
283:880-881, 1970.
Murphy RLH, Block P, Bird KT, Yurchak P. Accuracy of
cardiac auscultation by microwave. Chest 63:578-581, 1973.
Mattioli LF, Goertz KK, Ardinger RH, Belmont JM, Cox
R, Thomas CM. Pediatric cardiology: auscultation from 280 miles away. Kansas
Medicine 93:326, 347-350.
Belmont JM, Mattioli LF, Goertz KK, Ardinger RH,
Thomas CM. Evaluation of remote stethoscopy for pediatric telecardiology.
Telemedicine Journal 1:133-149, 1995. [Includes a definitive bibliography of
telestethoscopy Ed.] |