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. 2017 Sep 15;50(1):1–55. doi: 10.1007/s10840-017-0277-z

Table 6.

Types of ambulatory cardiac monitoring devices

Type of recorder Typical monitoring duration Continuous recording Event recording Auto trigger Unique features
Holter monitor 24–48 h, approximately 7–30 days Yes Yes N/A Short term, provides quantitative data on arrhythmia burden
Patch monitor 1–3 weeks Yes Yes N/A Intermediate term, can provide continuous data for up to several weeks; improved patient compliance without lead wires
External loop recorder 1 month Yes Yes Variable Good correlation between symptoms and even brief arrhythmias
External nonloop recorder Months No Yes No May be used long term and intermittently; will not capture very brief episodes
Smartphone monitor Indefinite No Yes No Provides inexpensive long-term intermittent monitoring; dependent on patient compliance; requires a smartphone
Mobile cardiac telemetry 30 days Yes Yes Yes Real time central monitoring and alarms; relatively expensive
Implantable loop recorder Up to 3 years Yes Yes Yes Improved patient compliance for long-term use; not able to detect 30-s episodes of AF due to detection algorithm; presence of AF needs to be confirmed by EGM review because specificity of detection algorithm is imperfect; expensive
Pacemakers or ICDs with atrial leads Indefinite Yes Yes Yes Excellent AF documentation of burden and trends; presence of AF needs to be confirmed by electrogram tracing review because specificity of detection algorithms is imperfect; expensive
Wearable multisensor ECG monitors Indefinite Yes Yes Yes ECG 3 leads, temp, heart rate, HRV, activity tracking, respiratory rate, galvanic skin response

AF atrial fibrillation, ICD implantable cardioverter defibrillator, ECG electrocardiogram, HRV heart rate variability