Stethoscope’s Days Numbered?

Professors predict device will become obsolete in two years.

By: Michael Barbella

Managing Editor

It has, without a doubt, become the most defining hallmark of the medical profession.

Invented in 1816 by French doctor René Théophile Hyacinthe Laënnec, the stethoscope was designed to improve doctors’ ability to listen to body sounds. Before its creation, physicians would put their ear directly on the patient’s body (known as immediate auscultation) to detect heart rhythm or monitor breathing patterns. Laënnec reportedly remedied the ineffective and awkward practice by rolling up a piece of paper to amplify his patient’s heart rhythm. 

The stethoscope will celebrate its 200th birthday in two years, but an editorial featured in Global Heart — the journal of the World Heart Federation — predicts the outdated device will not live long enough to celebrate. Editor-in-chief Professor Jagat Narula and his colleague, Associate Professor Bret Nelson, both from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, N.Y., claim the improved accuracy of ultrasound devices and their ease-of-use will lead to the stethoscope’s demise.

“At the time of this writing, several manufacturers offer hand-held ultrasound machines slightly larger than a deck of cards, with technology and screens modelled after modern smartphones,” the authors wrote. “Certainly the stage is set for disruption; as LPs were replaced by cassettes, then CDs and .mp3s, so too might the stethoscope yield to ultrasound.”

According to Narula and Nelson, current ultrasound devices increasingly are more accurate in diagnosing heart, lung, and other organ complications. Even though the cheapest ultrasound on today’s market can cost upward of several thousand dollars compared with a disposable stethoscope at $20, the advent of point-of-care ultrasounds are making ultrasonography cheaper, easier, and more accurate. Using state-of-the-art imaging technology that can facilitate either a symptom-based examination or surgical image-guidance, point-of-care ultrasounds offer quick and easy exams that can be performed by the patient’s bedside.

“Many experts have argued that ultrasound has become the stethoscope of the 21st century,” the authors continued. “Why, then, do we not see ultrasound machines in the coat pocket of every clinician? Several factors play a role. The ultrasound machines are expensive, and even clinicians enamored with the promise of point-of-care ultrasound must make a financial decision weighing the increased diagnostic accuracy against increased cost.”

The authors did note that some doctors argue the “analog acoustics of the stethoscope” provide the “truest sound” for examining the internal condition of a patient’s organs. However, as mentoring physicians increase their use of point-of-care ultrasounds for patient diagnosis and surgery guidance, future doctors will be exposed to a more applicable and comprehensive use of sonography that does not rest solely on physical examination.

“Medical students will train with portable devices during their preclinical years, and witness living anatomy and physiology previously only available through simulation. And as they take on leadership roles themselves they may realise an even broader potential of a technology we are only beginning to fully utilize. At that point will the “modern” stethoscope earn a careful cleaning, tagging, and white-glove placement in the vault next to the artifacts of Laënnec, Golding Bird, George Cammann, and David Littmann?”

Keep Up With Our Content. Subscribe To Medical Product Outsourcing Newsletters