Pacemakers and Internal Defibrillators, Imperiled By Headphones

By Alexis Ceck
22:34, November 10th 2008
24 votes
Vote this story
Pacemakers and Internal Defibrillators, Imperiled By Headphones

Metal detectors in airports have negative effects on pacemakers and implantable defibrillators. They interfere with their mechanism and can have disastrous consequences. Thus, people with such devices are not allowed to go through these metal detectors in places such as airports, where they are mandatory for the rest.

Metal detectors, however, are easy to avoid. Recent studies have shown that other devices, used almost on a daily basis. One of these devices is the headphones one uses with regular MP3 players, such as the iPod. Headphones have little magnets inside of them that are apparently strong enough to alter the normal heart rhythm kept in place by the pacemakers and defibrillators.

It seems that the MP3 players themselves are virtually harmless and that only the headphones pose a threat to the rhythm regulating devices.

The study show that if the headphones are in one’s ears, the devices are not affected in any way, as the distance between the ears and the heart is big enough for the headphones to not interfere with the functioning of neither pacemaker nor defibrillator.

The distance that allows the headphones to hinder the operation of the devices was estimated at 1.2 inches. Consequently, keeping the headphones in a chest pocket is too close to the heart and is thus life-threatening. The magnets can even completely de-activate internal defibrillators.

However, the magnets do not completely ruin the life-saving devices. Once the headphones are removed from the heart’s vicinity, the devices go back to their optimal efficiency rate. But when it comes to heart rate, a few second are enough for a catastrophe. The headphones seem to be 20 time stronger that the level that affects the pacemakers and defibrillators, and they come from a wide array of big companies, such as Sony or Philips.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Low Blood Oxygen on Everest Proved Another Amazing Human Capability

Low Blood Oxygen on Everest Proved Another Amazing Human Capability

British researchers have found that the established medical rules about the amount of oxygen needed by a body under stress might be wrong. The world-first measurements of blood oxygen levels in...

Exact Results Regarding the Teen Birth Rate Increase

Exact Results Regarding the Teen Birth Rate Increase

According to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the teen birth rate increased in more than half of all states in 2006. Back in December 2007, the U.S. Centers for Disease...

Bird Flu kills Woman In Beijing

Bird Flu kills Woman In Beijing

Avian influenza has been widely debated in the last years, as it can spread to humans, not only poultry. The H5N1 virus has killed 248 people worldwide since 2003 and scientists are afraid that the...

Wegmans To Offer Free Antibiotics

Wegmans To Offer Free Antibiotics

Starting Tuesday, Wegmans Food Markets offers its customer antibiotics at no charge for a period of three months, aiming to reduce consumer costs at the height of cold and flu season when there...

Deep Brain Stimulation Helps Parkinson’s Patients

Deep Brain Stimulation Helps Parkinson’s Patients

Tuesday, researchers revealed that deep brain stimulation significantly improved Parkinson’s disease symptoms including trembling and slowness of movement, which raises high hopes for all those...

dotclear
Latest videos in Health
Plastic Bags Help to Save...
Nuclear knuckles
Restoring the pee-h balance
Bird flu alert in Hong Kong
Ireland in pork product alert

dotclear
Health You are here: Health
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Health
UAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer VaccineUAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer Vaccine

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
Grim mood at US tech-fests

» read full story
dotclear