The
American
Heart Association has warned that MP3 players may adversely affect some
heart-monitoring electronics.
New
research suggests that the neodymium magnets used in the headsets of many
players can cause harmful interference to implanted pacemakers and cardioverter
defibrillators.
The study found that the magnets in the headphones caused the interference
when placed within 3cm of the implanted device. The magnets do not pose any risk
beyond this range.
"For patients with pacemakers, exposure to the headphones can force the
device to deliver signals to the heart, causing it to beat without regard to the
patient's underlying heart rhythm," said Dr William H Maisel, senior author of
the study and director of the Medical Device Safety Institute at the Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center.
"Exposure of a defibrillator to the headphones can temporarily deactivate the
defibrillator."
This is not the first time that portable media players have been cited as
harming implanted medical devices.
Earlier this year, the US Food and Drug Administration conducted a study into
possible negative health effects of the iPod following a presentation from a
high-school science student.
The players were eventually found
not
to pose any health risk, but hardware manufacturers are having to pay more
attention to the possible side effects of their devices in light of an
increasingly litigious customer base.
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