STAT Health has emerged from stealth to introduce a 24/7 in-ear wearable that measures blood flow to the head to better understand symptoms such as dizziness, brain fog, headaches, fainting, and fatigue upon standing. And these are common symptoms for illnesses like long COVID, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and other orthostatic (caused by standing) syndromes that affect more than 13 million Americans. Clinically tested at Johns Hopkins and peer-reviewed in the March 2023 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), the device has been shown to predict fainting minutes before it happens.
STAT Health has been backed by $5.1 million in seed funding from J2 Ventures, BonAngels Venture Partners, and a diverse group of prominent angel investors. And the company has also received grant funding from the U.S. Air Force.
Many people with illnesses such as long COVID, POTS, and ME/CFS suffer from symptoms caused by reduced blood flow to the brain upon standing. Even though this is theoretically understood, this has been difficult to experimentally prove (until now). Doctors at Johns Hopkins, Brigham and Women’s, and Harvard Medical School have used ultrasound for demonstrating that Cerebral Blood Flow (ultrasound-measured flow in cerebral arteries as a method of quantifying blood flow to the head) is a key biomarker that objectively measures the presence and severity of many of these “invisible illnesses.”
In order to fit into a wearable form factor, STAT uses an optical sensor instead of ultrasound and taps into a shallow ear artery to measure a proxy to ultrasound-derived Cerebral Blood Flow.
STAT is known as the world’s smallest wearable (half the rigid volume of Bose sleepbuds) and even smaller than some invisible-in-the-canal hearing aids. Along with having advanced optical sensors, the device incorporates an accelerometer, a pressure sensor, temperature sensors, AI edge computing, multi-day battery life, and a micro solar panel. Plus STAT can be worn in-ear 24/7 — it co-exists with more than 90% of devices that go in/around your ear, and can be left in while sleeping and showering. And because it can charge using solar while in-ear, some may never have to take it out to charge.
The STAT earpiece auto-detects a user’s every stand to track how Heart Rate, Blood Pressure Trend, and Blood Flow to Head change in response. STAT distills that into an Up Score to track time spent upright, and a Flow Score to help users pace their recovery by watching for blood flow abnormalities. And then STAT learns about each user’s unique body over time to provide personalized coaching to promote healthy lifestyle choices, such as informed hydration/salt intake, and paced rehab.
KEY QUOTES:
“Cerebral Blood Flow (CBF) is the critical missing vital sign – poor CBF is the cause of common orthostatic symptoms such as dizziness and brain fog. My Dutch colleagues have measured this with ultrasound on over a thousand patients. However, it’s not easy to measure CBF, so most clinics approximate using secondary metrics of Heart Rate and Blood Pressure, which often mislead. Unfortunately, this frequently leads to the wrong conclusion that the symptoms are just psychological, when in fact, there are physiological abnormalities.”
— Peter Rowe, M.D., Sunshine Natural Wellbeing Foundation Professor of Chronic Fatigue and Related Disorders, Johns Hopkins Medicine
“It’s well understood that the ear is a biometric gold mine because of its close proximity to the brain and major arteries. This allows for new biometrics such as Blood Flow to Head and Blood Pressure Trend to be possible. In addition, the ear is largely isolated from data corruption caused by arm motion – a problem that plagues current wearables and prevents them from monitoring heart metrics during many daily tasks. The ear is really the ideal window into the brain and heart.”
“Nobody has realized the ear’s true potential due to the miniaturization and complex systems design needed to make a practical and user-friendly ear wearable. I’ve been pioneering ultra-miniature in-ear electronics for about a decade including my work bringing Bose sleep buds to market, and it still took us three years to figure this out. After multiple engineering breakthroughs, we’ve succeeded in unlocking the ear to combine the convenience and long-term nature of wearables with the high-fidelity nature of obtrusive clinical monitors. No other device comes close along the axes of wearability and cardiac signal quality, which is why we believe STAT is truly the world’s most advanced wearable.”
— Daniel Lee, co-founder and CEO of STAT Health