Back to iVillage
Login to iVillage.com
close
Forgot your username or password?

Not yet a member? Meet & share countless ideas on over 1,000 message boards with women just like you. Join Now!

Headphones May Threaten Heart-Device Performance

Oct. 6 (HealthDay News) -- A U.S. study offers more evidence that portable headphones can create magnetic interference that might make implanted defibrillators and pacemakers malfunction.

Using the headphones over the ears doesn't appear to be a problem, but storing them in a shirt or jacket pocket near the chest or allowing them to hang near the heart could spell trouble, researchers found.

The findings should encourage doctors to spend more time talking to their patients about the possible risks of headphones, which could disrupt signaling and threaten lives, the study authors said in a report published in the October issue of the HeartRhythm Journal.

The researchers examined several kinds of portable headphones in 100 patients. They found the level of magnetic interference they emit may be enough to disrupt the devices' ability to detect problems in the heart's rhythm. In other words, the devices could miss an abnormal heart rhythm and fail to reset it to a proper pace.

"As digital music devices continue their current popularity, the risk of device interaction from portable headphones should be accounted for in patients with implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and pacemakers," lead author Dr. William H. Maisel of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center at Harvard University, said in a news release from the Heart Rhythm Society. "This study reinforces the need for a doctor-patient dialogue that includes warnings against certain scenarios, such as hanging headphones around the neck or storing them inside a front shirt pocket or jacket pocket."

The headphones caused interference whether or not they were connected to a music player. But the devices worked properly when the patients took off the headphones.

Of the 100 patients studied, 55 had implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and 45 had pacemakers.

A study last year found similar results, although researchers didn't think they would be life-threatening.


SOURCE: Heart Rhythm Society, news release, Oct. 1, 2009

Advertisement
Care Circle
It Seems That You Are Not Logged In...

OR

Join Now

Welcome to Care Circle, an exclusive tool to help you take care of yourself and your loved ones. Here's how it works:

  1. Create profiles for yourself and your loved ones.
  2. Select the topics and conditions that interest each of you.
  3. Get customized news updates, original content, tools, and expert advice for each Care Circle member delivered directly to your personalized homepage.

The information you input is strictly private; you choose who has access to your Care Circle.

How do I add myself or someone else to my care circle?

Click on "Add someone." Fill out the short profile. Choose an avatar. Select the topics and conditions that interest this person from the pulldown menu. You can select as many as you want, but you must choose at least one. Click on "Add Someone" again. You should start getting updates immediately.

How do I save content to my Care Circle?

Click on "Manage My Care Circle." Select the tab of the person for whom you're saving content. Put your cursor over the piece of content that you want to save; a disk icon will appear in the righthand corner. Click on the disk and the piece of content will be moved to a save folder.

How do I add additional topics and conditions for someone in my Care Circle?

Click on "Manage My Care Circle." Select the tab for the person whose preferences you'd like to update. Under "Add More to Follow," select additional topics and conditions.

How do I delete topics and conditions for someone in my Care Circle?

Click on "Manage My Care Circle." Select the tab for the person whose preferences you'd like to update. Under "Follows," scroll over the topic or condition you want to delete. An "X" should appear on the righthand side. Click on the "X" and the topic or condition will be deleted from the list.

Advertisement