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Masimo's 'MightySat' Fingertip Pulse Oximeter Now Available From Apple

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Masimo has announced that its MightySat fingertip pulse oximeter can now be purchased from Apple.com and select Apple retail locations in the U.S. and Canada.

masimo-mightysat
The pulse oximeter provides noninvasive measurements of oxygen saturation, pulse rate, and perfusion index, allegedly with greater accuracy than over a dozen other hospital-grade pulse oximeters.

In a study of 70 healthy volunteers during conditions of movement and low blood flow, Masimo SET was the most accurate pulse oximeter when compared to 19 other hospital-grade pulse oximeters. SpO2 accuracy was defined as being within 7% of the reference value and pulse rate accuracy as being within 10%.

The measurements and trends are sent to iPhone or iPad via Bluetooth LE and stored in the Masimo Personal Health app available in the App Store, while the data can also be shared with Apple's official Health app if permission is granted.

MightySat is $299, while a premium version that also measures respiration rate and pleth variability index is available for $399.

Top Rated Comments

keysofanxiety Avatar
125 months ago
I am still waiting for the cloaking device to appear on kickstarter...
I'm just waiting for the holodeck with Seven of Nine as DLC :D :oops:
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
125 months ago
I've always thought that Star Trek gives us the vision and human ingenuity will eventually give us the means.
I am still waiting for the cloaking device to appear on kickstarter...
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
JeffyTheQuik Avatar
125 months ago
I'd like to see Foreflight and other aviation EFB's be able to display this info on screen. For me, having this, along with blood sugar on 2-3 second intervals, with color coding would be good for pilots.

And, if you think 7% error is bad for an Oximeter, you should see the error rates for blood glucose strips...


How accurate is your blood glucose meter?

A major study found that almost half of meters do not meet the minimum required standards:


* For blood sugars over 75 mg (4.2 mmol): Accurate within 20%. For example, if your blood sugar is 200 mg (11 mmol), the meter must read between 160 (8.8 mmol) and 240 (13.3 mmol) at least 95% of the time.
* For blood sugars under 75 mg (4.2 mmol): Accurate within 15 mg. For example, if your blood sugar is 60 mg (3.3 mmol), the meter must read between 45 (2.5 mmol) and 75 (4.2 mmol) at least 95% of the time.

There is a new proposal that would require all results to be within 15%
Yep... if you're at 75, you could be at 65 mg/dl or 90 mg/dl, but honestly, for me, they're pretty tight, not at the extremes. It's just the panic of the OMG! These can be off and KILL YOU!
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Scottsoapbox Avatar
125 months ago
This is $18 on Amazon if you're willing to read the numbers on the device instead of your iPhone...
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
PracticalMac Avatar
125 months ago
I'd like to see Foreflight and other aviation EFB's be able to display this info on screen. For me, having this, along with blood sugar on 2-3 second intervals, with color coding would be good for pilots.

And, if you think 7% error is bad for an Oximeter, you should see the error rates for blood glucose strips...



Yep... if you're at 75, you could be at 65 mg/dl or 90 mg/dl, but honestly, for me, they're pretty tight, not at the extremes. It's just the panic of the OMG! These can be off and KILL YOU!
Sobering info.

More sobering is a lot of people say AW should not do Sp02 because it needs FDA approval, wont be accurate, and yet they have no idea the lack of accuracy of approved devices!

Thanks for posting.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
smithrh Avatar
125 months ago
The Apple Watch already has a pulse oximeter, but it's not enabled, likely because of the huge delay/effort needed for FDA approval.

https://9to5mac.com/2015/04/24/apple-watch-blood-oxygen/

The FDA's not wrong to test and regulate vital medical devices, and Apple certainly could not delay EVERY Apple Watch generation over that one feature. But it's a shame it can't happen quicker.
Top of the wrist is not a great place for gathering SpO2 data through reflectance, which I suspect Apple found out. Yes, it appears that there are some extra LEDs and sensors in there, but that alone doesn't make a pulse oximeter.

So, I wouldn't jump on the FDA. Nor is the FDA approval process all that horrible.

Source: I worked on SpO2 devices when they were first coming out, participated in FDA data collection and clinicals. There's a reason why the fingertip sensors are still dominant - they work.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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