Omron’s HeartGuide: blood pressure monitoring for the modern age

Medical Device Network · Omron

In This Article:

Omron HeartGuide: Blood Pressure Monitoring with Wearable Technology

Hypertension, also known as high blood pressure, doesn’t tend to cause many noticeable symptoms on its own. It’s easy for many patients to pass through life with no clue how hypertension is impacting them and their body.

But if a person has high blood pressure, it means that the walls of their arteries are constantly under too much force. Despite this being identified as a leading risk factor for stroke, heart attacks, kidney failure and even dementia, it can be difficult for patients to keep up with the need to constantly monitor their hypertension and adjust their medication accordingly.

Enter Omron’s HeartGuide. The smartwatch is built with a wearable blood pressure monitor embedded in the cuff, which expands and tightens to take a blood pressure reading just like an upper-arm oscillometric machine found in a doctor’s surgery.

Other blood pressure monitoring wearables on the market tend to rely on sensor technology to provide an estimate of blood pressure through pulse readings, but HeartGuide takes a more traditional, and accurate, route. According to Omron, HeartGuide is the first clinically validated blood pressure monitor of its kind.

A miniature medical device

“A traditional blood pressure monitor comes as a cuff worn around the upper arm, attached to a tube and a screen,” says Omron marketing director Lucia Prada. “With HeartGuide, we actually have everything integrated in the wearable in a miniature form. It has the same technology, inflating and deflating like a traditional blood pressure monitor, but it's so small that you can wear it on your wrist like a watch.

“Some patients adapt their medication based on the readings they get, so it’s really important to have a device that is clinically validated and follows the protocols.”

HeartGuide gives almost identical readings to equipment used in a clinic. At the European Society of Cardiology 2019 Congress, Jichi Medical University hypertension specialist Dr Kazuomi Kario, who worked on the development of the device, described the difference between the readings of the devices as only 0.9%. This makes it more than suitable for the day-to-day monitoring it’s designed for.

HeartGuide also has a step counter, calorie measure and sleep tracker, which enables users to see how all these factors are interacting and correlating with their blood pressure. Patients can add reminders about medication, or input that they drank caffeine or alcohol to see how this impacts their readings. All of this information is accessible through HeartGuide’s companion app, HeartAdvisor.