City
Epaper

Smartphone app may help spot stroke symptoms as they occur

By IANS | Updated: February 3, 2023 17:40 IST

New York, Feb 3 A new smartphone application may help people who are having a stroke or their ...

Open in App

New York, Feb 3 A new smartphone application may help people who are having a stroke or their family and caregivers recognise common stroke symptoms in real time, prompting them to quickly call healthcare providers.

Called FAST.AI, the app might be as accurate at diagnosing stroke as a neurologist, which may minimise the long-term effects of a stroke and improve chances for a full recovery, preliminary research suggests.

FAST.AI is a fully automated smartphone application for detection of severe stroke using machine learning algorithms to recognise facial asymmetry (drooping of the muscles in the face), arm weakness and speech changes all common stroke symptoms.

The smartphone application uses a facial video of the patient to examine 68 facial landmark points; sensors that measure arm movement and orientation; and voice recordings detect speech changes. Information from each test was sent to a database server for analysis.

"Early results confirm the app reliably identified acute stroke symptoms as accurately as a neurologist, and they will help to improve the app's accuracy in detecting signs and symptoms of stroke," said study author Radoslav I. Raychev, a clinical professor of neurology and a vascular neurologist at the University of California at Los Angeles.

Researchers validated FAST.AI's performance by testing nearly 270 patients with a diagnosis of acute stroke within 72 hours of hospital admission at four major metropolitan stroke centres from July 2021 to July 2022.

Neurologists who examined the patients tested the app then compared the FAST.AI results with their clinical impressions.

The analysis found that the smart phone app accurately detected stroke-associated facial asymmetry in nearly 100 per cent of patients.

The app accurately detected arm weakness in more than two-thirds of the cases.

While the slurred speech module remains to be fully validated and tested, preliminary analyses confirmed that it may be able to reliably detect slurred speech, according to the researchers.

A limitation of the study is that neurologists (not the individuals, family members or caregivers) conducted the screenings and taught patients how to use the application.

The findings of the study are set to be presented at the American Stroke Associationa¿s International Stroke Conference 2023 in Dallas, the US, from February 8-10.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: FebruaryLos AngelesUniversity Of CaliforniaDallasL.a.Los angeles dream centerAngelesCity of angelsDel rio port of entryAngels
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalCalifornia: Man Sexually Assaults Woman Inside Los Angeles Whole Foods Market, CCTV Footage Surfaces

InternationalLos Angeles Mass Stabbing: At Least 6 Injured in Knife Attack in Downtown LA

InternationalLos Angeles Accident: At Least 3 Killed, 6 Injured After Car Crashes Into 99 Ranch Market in Westwood

InternationalLos Angeles: 2 Injured After U-Haul Truck Ploughs Into Anti-Iranian Regime Protest in Westwood (Watch Videos)

EntertainmentCollaborating Across Traditions Has Shaped My Musical Voice: Aditya Prakash

Health Realted Stories

HealthMeditation can help find solutions to global challenges: V-P Radhakrishnan

HealthIndia’s pharmaceutical exports exceed $28 billion up to February

HealthGujarat: Hotels, eateries fined for paneer display violations; 615 kg of substandard food destroyed

HealthMinistry of Social Justice clocks highest-ever Rs 11,810 crore expenditure in FY26

HealthIndia to boost biosimilar insulin, CGM manufacturing as Global South looks for support