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Mobile Apps and Wearable Devices for Cardiovascular Health: Narrative Review

Mobile Apps and Wearable Devices for Cardiovascular Health: Narrative Review

The screening for wearables took place via Google search aimed at identifying the most relevant heart health wearables available both in the DACH region and globally. The keywords “heart wearables,” “heart device tracking,” “health wearables,” “healthcare wearable devices,” “smart wearables,” “fitness wearables,” “heart health tracking,” “medical trackers,” “DACH herzmonitor,” and “Herzmonitor” were used.

Gauri Kumari Chauhan, Patrick Vavken, Christine Jacob

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e65782

Modernizing the Staging of Parkinson Disease Using Digital Health Technology

Modernizing the Staging of Parkinson Disease Using Digital Health Technology

Digital devices, including smartphones, tablets, and wearables, provide the capability to obtain accurate, objective measures and PROs for neurocognitive monitoring; allow for a much more fine-grained approach to longitudinal monitoring across all functional areas of neurocognition; and lead to the enhancement of personalized rehabilitative efforts, ultimately yielding higher patient quality of life.

John Michael Templeton, Christian Poellabauer, Sandra Schneider, Morteza Rahimi, Taofeek Braimoh, Fhaheem Tadamarry, Jason Margolesky, Shanna Burke, Zeina Al Masry

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e63105

Validation of Ecological Momentary Assessment With Reference to Accelerometer Data: Repeated-Measures Panel Study With Multilevel Modeling

Validation of Ecological Momentary Assessment With Reference to Accelerometer Data: Repeated-Measures Panel Study With Multilevel Modeling

This expansion provides researchers with a broader range of choices, as both research-grade and consumer-grade wearables, with varying costs and capacities to measure health conditions, are now available in the market.

Jung Min Noh, SongHyun Im, JooYong Park, Jae Myung Kim, Miyoung Lee, Ji-Yeob Choi

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e59878

Using Wear Time for the Analysis of Consumer-Grade Wearables’ Data: Case Study Using Fitbit Data

Using Wear Time for the Analysis of Consumer-Grade Wearables’ Data: Case Study Using Fitbit Data

It is common to observe what is called “wearables’ abandonment”; as the excitement from having a new gadget wears off, people start to wear the sensors less and less [8]. In the accelerometer research—where accelerometers are commonly used to monitor physical activity—researchers have established different methods to account for wear time in the data processing pipeline [9-12].

Loubna Baroudi, Ronald Fredrick Zernicke, Muneesh Tewari, Noelle E Carlozzi, Sung Won Choi, Stephen M Cain

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e46149

Cardiac Repair and Regeneration via Advanced Technology: Narrative Literature Review

Cardiac Repair and Regeneration via Advanced Technology: Narrative Literature Review

Reference 84: Mobile health: the power of wearables, sensors, and apps to transform clinical trialswearables

Yugyung Lee, Sushil Shelke, Chi Lee

JMIR Biomed Eng 2025;10:e65366

Applying AI in the Context of the Association Between Device-Based Assessment of Physical Activity and Mental Health: Systematic Review

Applying AI in the Context of the Association Between Device-Based Assessment of Physical Activity and Mental Health: Systematic Review

Nowadays, the ability to collect raw accelerometer data without great effort (eg, via passive continuous longitudinal measurements from wearables) and in large quantities allows the application of sophisticated artificial intelligence algorithms for the detection, classification, or prediction of mental health states and traits.

Simon Woll, Dennis Birkenmaier, Gergely Biri, Rebecca Nissen, Luisa Lutz, Marc Schroth, Ulrich W Ebner-Priemer, Marco Giurgiu

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e59660

App- and Wearable-Based Remote Monitoring for Patients With Myasthenia Gravis and Its Specialists: Feasibility and Usability Study

App- and Wearable-Based Remote Monitoring for Patients With Myasthenia Gravis and Its Specialists: Feasibility and Usability Study

The Mya Link app contains the following modules: (1) transmission and integration of sensor-based data from wearables including heart rate, oxygen saturation, and step count (device: Garmin Vivosmart 5); (2) assessment of the forced vital capacity from a digital spirometer (device: MIR Spirobank Smart One); (3) assessment of questionnaires and PROMs (see details under Section 3.5); and a (4) communication module for individual requests and patient-physician interaction.

Maike Stein, Regina Stegherr, Pushpa Narayanaswami, David Legg, Meret Herdick, Andreas Meisel, Lea Gerischer, Sophie Lehnerer

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e58266