Monitoring great ape heart health through innovative electrocardiogram technology: Training methodologies and welfare implications.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2020
Publication Title
Zoo Biology
Abstract
Assessing and treating cardiovascular disease (or heart disease) is a growing concern for institutions housing great apes, as it is a major cause of mortality in all four taxa managed in human care. As part of a proactive monitoring plan, zoological managers and veterinarians often elect to perform electrocardiograms (ECGs) on their great ape populations. ECGs noninvasively evaluate cardiac electrical activity, and are thereby capable of providing information regarding heart function. This electrical signature is transcribed as a visual display of waveforms, referred to as telemetry strips, and can detect irregularities in heart rhythm, also known as arrhythmia. While traditional 6- or 12-lead ECGs are recommended periodically as part of a thorough heart performance evaluation, here we discuss the KardiaMobile (KM) device as an additional primate welfare tool. KM is a small, Food and Drug Administration-cleared, clinical-grade mobile ECG monitor that requires only 30 s of pressure to flag heart rate or arrhythmic abnormalities. We detail the training process and applicability to great apes in human care.
Volume
39
Issue
6
First Page
443
Last Page
447
Recommended Citation
Cloutier Barbour C, Danforth MD, Murphy H, Sleeper MM, Kutinsky I. Monitoring great ape heart health through innovative electrocardiogram technology: Training methodologies and welfare implications. Zoo Biol. 2020 Nov;39(6):443-447. doi: 10.1002/zoo.21567. Epub 2020 Sep 10. PMID: 32909258.
DOI
10.1002/zoo.21567
ISSN
1098-2361
PubMed ID
32909258