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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Kollmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Kollmann.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2009

Effect of Home-Based Telemonitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology on the Outcome of Heart Failure Patients After an Episode of Acute Decompensation: Randomized Controlled Trial

Daniel Scherr; Peter Kastner; Alexander Kollmann; Andreas Hallas; Johann Auer; Heinz Krappinger; Herwig Schuchlenz; Gerhard Stark; Wilhelm Grander; Gabriele Jakl; Guenter Schreier; Fruhwald Fm

Background Telemonitoring of patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) is an emerging concept to detect early warning signs of impending acute decompensation in order to prevent hospitalization. Objective The goal of the MOBIle TELemonitoring in Heart Failure Patients Study (MOBITEL) was to evaluate the impact of home-based telemonitoring using Internet and mobile phone technology on the outcome of heart failure patients after an episode of acute decompensation. Methods Patients were randomly allocated to pharmacological treatment (control group) or to pharmacological treatment with telemedical surveillance for 6 months (tele group). Patients randomized into the tele group were equipped with mobile phone–based patient terminals for data acquisition and data transmission to the monitoring center. Study physicians had continuous access to the data via a secure Web portal. If transmitted values went outside individually adjustable borders, study physicians were sent an email alert. Primary endpoint was hospitalization for worsening CHF or death from cardiovascular cause. Results The study was stopped after randomization of 120 patients (85 male, 35 female); median age was 66 years (IQR 62-72). The control group comprised 54 patients (39 male, 15 female) with a median age of 67 years (IQR 61-72), and the tele group included 54 patients (40 male, 14 female) with a median age of 65 years (IQR 62-72). There was no significant difference between groups with regard to baseline characteristics. Twelve tele group patients were unable to begin data transmission due to the inability of these patients to properly operate the mobile phone (“never beginners”). Four patients did not finish the study due to personal reasons. Intention-to-treat analysis at study end indicated that 18 control group patients (33%) reached the primary endpoint (1 death, 17 hospitalizations), compared with 11 tele group patients (17%, 0 deaths, 11 hospitalizations; relative risk reduction 50%, 95% CI 3-74%, P = .06). Per-protocol analysis revealed that 15% of tele group patients (0 deaths, 8 hospitalizations) reached the primary endpoint (relative risk reduction 54%, 95% CI 7-79%, P= .04). NYHA class improved by one class in tele group patients only (P< .001). Tele group patients who were hospitalized for worsening heart failure during the study had a significantly shorter length of stay (median 6.5 days, IQR 5.5-8.3) compared with control group patients (median 10.0 days, IQR 7.0-13.0; P= .04). The event rate of never beginners was not higher than the event rate of control group patients. Conclusions Telemonitoring using mobile phones as patient terminals has the potential to reduce frequency and duration of heart failure hospitalizations. Providing elderly patients with an adequate user interface for daily data acquisition remains a challenging component of such a concept.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2007

Feasibility of a Mobile Phone–Based Data Service for Functional Insulin Treatment of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Patients

Alexander Kollmann; Michaela Riedl; Peter Kastner; Guenter Schreier; Bernhard Ludvik

Background Patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1) have to be active participants in their treatment because they are inevitably responsible for their own day-to-day-care. Availability of mobile Internet access is advancing rapidly and mobile phones are now widely available at low cost. Thus, mobile phones have the potential to assist in daily diabetes management and to enable a telemedical interaction between patients and health care professionals. Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate the feasibility and user acceptance of a mobile phone–based data service to assist DM1 patients on intensive insulin treatment. Methods A software application called Diab-Memory (based on Java 2 Mobile Edition) has been developed to support patients when entering diabetes-related data with synchronization to the remote database at the monitoring center. The data were then processed to generate statistics and trends, which were provided for the patient and his/her health care professional via a Web portal. The system has been evaluated in the course of a clinical before-after pilot trial. Outcome measures focused on patients’ adherence to the therapy, availability of the monitoring system, and the effects on metabolic status. General user acceptance of the system was evaluated using a questionnaire. Results Ten patients (four female) with DM1 participated in the trial. Mean age was 36.6 years (± 11.0 years) and prestudy glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 7.9% (± 1.1%). A total of 3850 log-ins were registered during the 3 months of the study. The total number of received datasets was 13003, which equates to an average of 14 transmitted parameters per patient per day. The service was well accepted by the patients (no dropouts), and data transmission via mobile phone was successful on the first attempt in 96.5% of cases. Upon completion of the study, a statistically significant improvement in metabolic control was observed (HbA1c: prestudy 7.9% ± 1.1% versus poststudy 7.5% ± 0.9%;P= .02). While there was a slight decrease in average blood glucose level (prestudy 141.8 mg/dL ± 22.5 mg/dL vs poststudy 141.2 mg/dL ± 23.1 mg/dL;P= .69), the difference was not statistically significant. Conclusion The results of the clinical pilot trial indicate that this proposed diabetes management system was well accepted by the patients and practical for daily usage. Thus, using the mobile phone as patient terminal seems to provide a ubiquitous, easy-to-use, and cost efficient solution for patient-centered data acquisition in the management of DM1. To confirm the promising results of the pilot trial further research has to be done to study long-term effects on glycemic control and cost-effectiveness.


Applied Clinical Informatics | 2010

Innovative telemonitoring system for cardiology: from science to routine operation.

Peter Kastner; Jürgen Morak; R. Modre; Alexander Kollmann; C. Ebner; Friedrich M. Fruhwald; Günter Schreier

OBJECTIVE Results of the Austrian MOBITEL (MOBIle phone based TELemonitoring for heart failure patients) trial indicate that home-based telemonitoring improves outcome of chronic heart failure (CHF) patients and reduces both frequency and duration of hospitalizations. Based on lessons learned, we assessed the weak points to clear the way for routine operations. METHODS We analyzed the system with respect to recommendations of the ESC Guidelines and experiences gained throughout the trial to identify potential improvements. The following components have been identified: a patient terminal with highest usability, integrated way to document drug-intake and well-being, and automated event detection for worsening of CHF. As a consequence the system was extended by Near Field Communication (NFC) technology and by an event management tool. RESULTS Usability evaluation with 30 adults (14f, median 51y. IQR[45-65]) showed that 21 (8f) were able to immediately operate the system after reading a step-by-step manual. Eight (6f) needed one time demonstration and one man (80y) failed to operate the blood pressure meter. Routine operation of the revised system started in March 2009. Within 9 months, 15 patients (4f, median 74y. IQR[71-83], all NYHA-III) transmitted 17,149 items. 43 events were detected because of body weight gain of more then 2kg within 2 days. 49 therapy adjustments were documented. Three patients stopped using the system, two (1f) because of non-compliance and one (m, 82y) because of death. Overall, the rate of adherence to daily data transfer was 78%. CONCLUSION First results confirm the applicability of the revised telemonitoring system in routine operation.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2012

An Integrated Healthcare Information System for End-to-End Standardized Exchange and Homogeneous Management of Digital ECG Formats

Jesús D. Trigo; Ignacio Martínez; Álvaro Alesanco; Alexander Kollmann; J. Escayola; Dieter Hayn; Günter Schreier; José García

This paper investigates the application of the enterprise information system (EIS) paradigm to standardized cardiovascular condition monitoring. There are many specifications in cardiology, particularly in the ECG standardization arena. The existence of ECG formats, however, does not guarantee the implementation of homogeneous, standardized solutions for ECG management. In fact, hospital management services need to cope with various ECG formats and, moreover, several different visualization applications. This heterogeneity hampers the normalization of integrated, standardized healthcare information systems, hence the need for finding an appropriate combination of ECG formats and a suitable EIS-based software architecture that enables standardized exchange and homogeneous management of ECG formats. Determining such a combination is one objective of this paper. The second aim is to design and develop the integrated healthcare information system that satisfies the requirements posed by the previous determination. The ECG formats selected include ISO/IEEE11073, Standard Communications Protocol for Computer-Assisted Electrocardiography, and an ECG ontology. The EIS-enabling techniques and technologies selected include web services, simple object access protocol, extensible markup language, or business process execution language. Such a selection ensures the standardized exchange of ECGs within, or across, healthcare information systems while providing modularity and accessibility.


Biomedizinische Technik | 2007

Predicting initiation and termination of atrial fibrillation from the ECG.

Dieter Hayn; Alexander Kollmann; Günter Schreier

Abstract Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia, affecting more than two million people in the US. Several therapies for patients with atrial fibrillation are available, but methods to help physicians select the optimal therapy for an individual patient are still required. Knowledge of whether a patient with a normal ECG will exhibit atrial fibrillation in the future, as well as whether atrial fibrillation will terminate spontaneously, would be very useful in clinical routine. The paper presents a software system for predicting the initiation and termination of atrial fibrillation from the ECG. The algorithms have been validated on ECGs from several signal databases. Prediction of the initiation of atrial fibrillation was achieved by detecting premature heart beats and analyzing the morphology of their P waves. Prediction of the termination of atrial fibrillation was based on calculation of the major atrial frequency. This frequency has been shown to decrease significantly prior to the termination of atrial fibrillation. Nevertheless, the effect is much less distinct in the large data set used for this study compared to previous studies. The initiation of atrial fibrillation, however, could be correctly predicted in approximately 75% of the data analyzed.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2006

Initial experiences with a telemedicine framework for remote pacemaker follow-up

Alexander Kollmann; Dieter Hayn; José García; Peter Kastner; Brigitte Rotman; Tscheliessnigg Kh; Guenter Schreier

According to international guidelines implanted cardiac pacemakers (PM) have to be checked periodically to ensure that they are working correctly. To spare a significant number of patients the burden of traveling to specialized PM clinics a telemedicine framework has been developed prototypically. A mobile, personal digital assistant (PDA) based PM follow-up unit provides the caregiver at the point-of-care with the necessary infrastructure to perform a basic PM follow-up examination remotely. In case of detected malfunction of the PM the patient is ordered to the hospital for further examination. The system has been evaluated in a clinical pilot trial on 44 patients with a total of 23 different PM models from 8 different manufacturers. The initial results indicate the potential of the concept to work as an efficient, manufacturer independent screening method with the ultimate goal to increase the safety, quality and efficiency of PM therapy


Elektrotechnik Und Informationstechnik | 2006

Mobile phones as user interface in the management of chronic diseases

Alexander Kollmann; Dieter Hayn; Peter Kastner; Günter Schreier

This paper presents and compares mobile phone-based solutions for assisting chronically ill patients in the self managing process by establishing an active cooperation and connection between patients and physicians. The article focuses on the patient terminal, i.e. how to provide the patient with a method to enter the measured data into the system, which is still one of the most challenging tasks.Diese Arbeit zeigt Möglichkeiten auf, wie das Mobiltelefon als Benutzerschnittstelle im Management von chronischen Krankheiten zur erweiterten Kommunikation zwischen Arzt und Patient eingesetzt werden kann. Der Artikel konzentriert sich auf das Benutzerterminal, das den Patienten bei der Eingabe der gemessenen Gesundheitsdaten unterstützt und das nach wie vor die Haupt-Herausforderung darstellt.


international conference on computers for handicapped persons | 2004

Mobile Phone Based User Interface Concept for Health Data Acquisition at Home

Günter Schreier; Alexander Kollmann; Martin Kramer; Jürgen Messmer; Andreas Hochgatterer; Peter Kastner

The availability of mobile information and communication technologies is increasing rapidly and provides huge opportunities for home monitoring applications. This paper presents a new human-computer interface concept which is based on digital camera enabled mobile phones. Only two keystrokes are necessary to take a photo of a medical measurement device, for example a blood pressure meter, and to send the photo to a remote monitoring centre where specifically designed algorithms extract the numeric values from the photo and store them to a database for further processing. The results of a feasibility study indicates the potential of this new method to give people access to mobile phone based, autonomous recording and documentation of health parameters at home.


Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2006

Mobile phone-based surveillance of cardiac patients at home

Daniel Scherr; R Zweiker; Alexander Kollmann; Peter Kastner; Günter Schreier; Fruhwald Fm


international conference on biomedical engineering | 2007

Improving telemonitoring of heart failure patients with NFC technology

Jürgen Morak; Alexander Kollmann; Dieter Hayn; Peter Kastner; G. Humer; Guenter Schreier

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Peter Kastner

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Dieter Hayn

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Guenter Schreier

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Günter Schreier

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Brigitte Rotman

Medical University of Graz

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Jürgen Morak

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Daniel Scherr

Medical University of Graz

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Fruhwald Fm

Medical University of Graz

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