AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of tele-clinic visits for patients with Marfan syndrome by utilizing vital signs and echocardiographic images collected by parents.
  • Fifteen parent-child pairs participated, where parents were trained to gather health data and images, taking an average of 70 minutes to do so.
  • Results indicated that tele-clinic visits are practical, as the data collected at home was comparable for most measurements, though systolic blood pressure was higher during on-site visits.

Article Abstract

Objective: To test feasibility of tele-clinic visits using parentally acquired vital signs and focused echocardiographic images in patients with Marfan syndrome.

Study Design: We included patients with Marfan syndrome aged 5-19 years followed in our clinic. We excluded patients with Marfan syndrome and history of previous aortic root (AoR) surgery, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, or AoR ≥4.5 cm. We trained parents in-person to acquire focused echocardiographic images on their children using a hand-held device as well as how to use a stadiometer, scale, blood pressure (BP) machine, and a digital stethoscope. Before tele-clinic visits, parents obtained the echocardiographic images and vital signs. We compared tele-clinic and on-site clinic visit data. Parental and clinic echocardiograms were independently analyzed.

Results: Fifteen patient/parent pairs completed tele-clinic visits, conducted at a median of 7.0 (IQR 3.0-9.9) months from the in-person training session. Parents took a median of 70 (IQR 60-150) minutes to obtain the height, weight, heart rate, BP, cardiac sounds, and echocardiographic images before tele-clinic visits. Systolic BP was greater on-site than at home (median +13 mm Hg, P = .014). Height, weight, diastolic BP, heart rate, and AoR measurements were similar.

Conclusions: This study provides information for implementing tele-clinic visits using parentally acquired vital signs and echocardiographic images in patients with Marfan syndrome. The results show that tele-clinic visits are feasible and that parents were able to obtain focused echocardiographic images on their children.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03581682.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2021.01.004DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of tele-clinic visits for patients with Marfan syndrome by utilizing vital signs and echocardiographic images collected by parents.
  • Fifteen parent-child pairs participated, where parents were trained to gather health data and images, taking an average of 70 minutes to do so.
  • Results indicated that tele-clinic visits are practical, as the data collected at home was comparable for most measurements, though systolic blood pressure was higher during on-site visits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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