Accuracy of a Noninvasive Temporal Artery Thermometer for Use in Infants
Open Access
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
- Vol. 155 (3) , 376-381
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.155.3.376
Abstract
Objectives To assess the accuracy of a new noninvasive temporal artery (TA) thermometer in infants; to compare the accuracy of the TA thermometer with that of a tympanic thermometer, using rectal thermometry as the criterion standard; and to compare the tolerability of the TA thermometer with that of the tympanic and rectal thermometers. Design Prospective evaluation of the accuracy of TA and tympanic thermometry, using rectal thermometry as the criterion standard. Setting Emergency department of an urban pediatric hospital. Subjects Convenience sample of 304 infants younger than 1 year presenting for care. Main Outcome Measures Temperatures were measured using TA, tympanic, and rectal thermometers for all infants. Agreement between TA or tympanic and rectal temperatures was assessed. The sensitivity and specificity of TA or tympanic thermometers for detecting rectal fever were determined. Discomfort scores, using a standardized scale, were assessed by trained observers after each temperature measurement was made. Results Linear regression analysis of the relation between TA and rectal temperatures yielded a model with a slope of 0.79 (vs a slope of 0.68 for tympanic vs rectal temperature;P= .02) and anrof 0.83 (vsr= 0.75 for tympanic vs rectal temperature;P<.001). Among 109 patients with a rectal temperature of 38°C or higher, the TA thermometer had a sensitivity of 0.66 compared with the tympanic thermometer's sensitivity of 0.49 (P<.001). Discomfort scores with TA thermometry were significantly lower than with rectal thermometry (P= .007). Conclusions The TA thermometer has limited sensitivity for detecting cases of rectal fever in infants. However, the TA thermometer is more accurate than the tympanic thermometer in infants, and it is better tolerated by infants than rectal thermometry.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tympanic membrane temperature as a measure of core temperatureArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1999
- A difference of 5°C between ear and rectal temperatures in a febrile patientThe American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1997
- A comparison of aural and rectal temperature measurements in children with moderate and severe injuriesJournal of Emergency Nursing, 1996
- Reliability of Infrared Tympanic Thermometry in the Detection of Rectal Fever in ChildrenAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1995
- Use of Tympanic Thermometers to Screen for Fever in Patients in a Pediatric Emergency DepartmentSouthern Medical Journal, 1993
- Rectal-Axillary Temperature Difference in Febrile and Afebrile Infants and ChildrenClinical Pediatrics, 1993
- Axillary and rectal temperature measurements in infants.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1992
- Comparison of a Tympanic Thermometer to Rectal and Oral Thermometers in a Pediatric Emergency DepartmentClinical Pediatrics, 1991
- Comparison of rectal, axillary, and tympanic membrane temperatures in infants and young childrenAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1991
- The Inability of a Temperature-Sensitive Pacifier to Identify Fevers in Ill InfantsArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1988