About this item:
Guardian of your heart -- SnapECG Hand held EKG monitor SnapECG is committed to provide the most accurate assessment for cardiopaths and giving them more peace of mind. We use a worldwide leading intelligent algorithm and hand touching technology which evaluates the properties of the EKG waveform, to minimise misdiagnosis and mistreatment and over-medical treatment by the Afib cardiac monitor. It records a single-lead heart rhythm which allows you to share EKG recordings with your doctors. SnapECG Heart monitor cooperate with many well-known medical institutions, and recommended by medical consultans as IR allows users to detect the cardiac disease earlier for timely treatment. Medical precision - lead: single-lead - measurement time: 30s/1min/ 3mins/5mins/continuous - sensitivity(gain): 5mm/mv (x0.5); 10mm/mv (x1); 20mm/mv (x2); error range+-10% - scanning speed: 12.5/25/50mm/S (error range+-10%) product dimension: 83mmx35mm x3.5mm product weight: 14g packing contents: electrocardiogram recorder x1 button battery (CR1620) x2 welcome guide x1 tips-during measurement 1. Take a measurement in a quiet environment 2. Maintain a stable emotion and keep breathing smoothly 3. It is recommended to capturing your ECG in a sit-down state 4. Do not move the device or shake the body 5. Keep your fingers properly pressed tips-store EKG history on the Cloud by registration after you register and Log in to your SnapECG account, all EKG measurement history will be stored in cloud drive under your account (no additional fee will be charged). you don't have to worry about data loss when updating the app or replacing new devices. You can still check the EKG monitoring history when you Log in again with a new phone.
4.1 out of 5
82.50% of customers are satisfied
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good device for home ECG
Positive in any regard. It is quite affordable, small, lightweight and very easy to use. Important feature, there is no costly annoying subscription needed, cloud storage is totally free, only requires registration. It does work very well and totally flawless with Apple iOS devices. You just have to download the SnapECG app, install the app and you are ready to go. Switch on Bluetooth, start the app, hold the SnapECG device with two fingers or your thumb on the contacts and the result will be a 30 second ECG. You can generate a good looking pdf which you can send, using the app, to yourself or to your doctors or other health professionals. Regarding the accuracy of the SnapECG device and app, I can say that it was displaying all my know heart issues. For privacy reasons I don't want to go into details but I can state, that this little device is very reliable and I'm very happy with it's reliability. In my opinion this device is a must and if your doctors are talking you to one of your ECG, you will learn when to contact your health professionals for verification.
5.0 out of 5 stars Does the job well
I’ve only had this device 3 days therefore I have no idea how robust physically it will turn out to be or how long the button battery will last but with these limitations in mind it is fair to say it does the job I bought it for.I have atrial fibrillation, previously paroxysmal but now established full time which this device has demonstrated.It is easy to set up and use and it stores your traces and will PDF them to email them to yourself for printing or forwarding to your medical adviser.I am a retired medic and can interpret my own ECG so don’t need to send it off elsewhere but I suspect that most people with AF recognise it only too well.The device arrived next day (Bolo Prime). It comes with instructions translated from Chinese but easy enough to use (it’s simple anyway). It also comes with a soft carrying bag with a drawstring and a spare battery.So far I’m very satisfied with it. At £79.99 it seems very good value.
1.0 out of 5 stars Software reliability
I have owned this for over year now. The device its self is fine. The associated software though is a disappointment. Does not update in background, often fails to connect to server, consequently fails to record. When you are already in an abnormal arrhythmia condition trying to get it to work is not what you need. Needs longer runtime setting, ideally a 30min setting. A previous phone I owned also would flag it up as containing a virus. Does not do though on my Samsung A71. Such a device needs to work reliably. May look at the Kardia, but the companies are virtually next door neighbours, so not sure if the same software issues will exist.
4.0 out of 5 stars It works but interpreting is tricky
Electronically this appears to work perfectly. It IS easy to connect (it doesn't need pairing), the app was easy to find (I used QR code) and install on my Samsung phone. Taking a reading is simple and reliable, I've used 2 thumbs or 4 fingers and both read fine. You press "record" on your phone app (close by) and touch the pads to activate the device, it takes a second or two to connect to the app and then there is a 5 second countdown and a 30 second reading time.It does keep history and there are some basic settings you can adjust like how long to take a reading for.However, the interpretation is far from idiot proof, presumably because they can't give medical diagnoses. The link in the app to a technical article in wikipedia isn't massively helpful.Most of my readings are described as "may be an abnormal rhythm". I was checking for atrial fibrillation which I occasionally get so I was concerned. I wondered if it simply wasn't reading accurately but I checked with others in the family and they do get different readings that make sense so I decided it WAS working. In the end I realised the device considers ANY reading under 60 bpm or over 100 bpm as "may be abnormal" deserving an amber notice and under 50 bpm gets a red notice. But since I have bradycardia (which is merely a low resting heart rate - c55 is common and under 50 sometimes) that's not helpful and not insightful into atrial fib etc. That said, there are further readings showing trend and rhythm lower down so if you realise this, you CAN see information that appears to provide meaningful insight if you know how to interpret it. I'm not medically trained so I'm going to have a word with my doctor to make sure I've got the right end of the stick, but I think I have.
5.0 out of 5 stars First class, does what it says it does.
Saves me tips to doctors, easy to use and forward info to surgery.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great product
Unique product
3.0 out of 5 stars Important
I checked the reviews could be used on android or iPhone well it definitely can't be used on android I have the new Samsung would not install it, had to borrow a iPhone to use it. Was very easy setup on phone. Just a warning to other people thinking of buying it
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent for identifying abnormal heart rate and arrhythmia.
Excellent little device that is simple to use. My wife suffers from paroxysmal AF and I have recently been experiencing some odd Arrhythmias. This SnapECG recorded my arrhythmia which A&E doctor found helpful and as a result am having a 24 hour monitor provided by local hospital cardiology next week. In summary excellent device for showing a cardiac abnormality, but it won’t provide a diagnosis of the problem, but it’s a good starting point for a doctor to have confirmation that there is a problem that requires further investigation. I have noticed that some doctors that are used to looking at a 12 lead ecg trace don’t seem to pay attention to the information recorded by the snap ecg they just say ‘ that’s not what I am used to seeing’ , but some doctors do look at the detail. For instance when wife knew that she had episode of AFib, it recorded a wild range of heart rate and abnormal arrhythmia during the trace, and when you know there is no problem the trace on snap ecg is normal so am confident in its accuracy to identify a abnormality.
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BHD59170
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Product origin: United Kingdom
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