What Experts Are Saying about the PELEX System

Leading experts in cardiology have enthusiastically received PinMed’s technology.

“As a practicing electrophysiologist, I can envision multiple clinical uses for the PELEX system. . . . I think this technology will be extremely useful, both for my own research applications, and also likely for clinical practice.” – Rachel Lampert, MD, Professor of Medicine (Cardiology/Electrophysiology), Yale University School of Medicine

There is a need for such a system; I am not aware of any other system like this one. This system takes ECG analysis into another dimension. Instead of ‘linear’ approaches, which use small lengths (3-10 sec) of ECG, this method allows serial comparisons of long segments of data, which provide robust characterization of data. This approach provides much more information than the traditional, short-term 12-lead ECG (which is 50-years old); it provides a tool to study dynamics of heart rate variability, restitution, etc. I would be very interested in using this system in my research.” – Robert L. Lux, PhD, Professor of Medicine, Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah

PELEX can save a lot of emergency visits for cardiac and syncope patients. PELEX can replace Holter Monitoring, event monitoring, and loop recorders.” – Samir Saba, MD, Professor of Medicine and Chief, Division of Cardiology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

“PELEX is a great clinical tool for management of atrial fibrillation, palpitation syndrome, long QT-syndrome, QT-evaluation in patients with antiarrhythmic drugs. Pelex is also a great research tool.  There is a need for such a system like PELEX, and I never saw a system like this one.” – Raul Weiss, MD, FACC, Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine, Ohio State University

“PELEX takes diagnostic electrophysiology to a new level, particularly, with unstable arrhythmic substrates, such as genetic repolarization disorders and more common syndromes, such as paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardias. It has the capability to be widely used for ambulatory arrhythmia monitoring and can potentially substitute invasive implantable loop recorders.” – Raveen Bazaz, MD, Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiologist, Cardiovascular Institute, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center