Depression of sublingual temperature by cold saliva.
- 29 March 1975
- Vol. 1 (5960) , 718-720
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.5960.718
Abstract
Sublingual and oesophageal temperatures were compared at various air temperatures in 16 subjects. In warm air (25-44 degrees C) sublingual temperatures stabilized within plus or minus 0-45 degrees C of oesophageal temperatures, but in air at room temperature (18-24 degrees C) they were sometimes as much as 1-1 degrees C below and in cold air (5-10 degrees C) as much as 4-4 degrees C below oesophageal readings. The sublingual-oesophageal temperature difference in cold air was greatly reduced by keeping the face warm, but it was not reduced in two patients breathing through tracheostomies and thereby eliminating cold air flow from the nose and pharynx. Parotid saliva temperature was low and saliva flow high during exposure, and cold saliva seemed to be mainly responsible for the erratic depression of sublingual temperature in the cold. These results indicate hazards in the casual use of sublingual temperatures, and indicate that external heat may have to be supplied to enable them to give reliable clinical assessments of body temperature.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- AURAL TEMPERATURE OF THE NEWBORN INFANTThe Lancet, 1974
- Proceedings: Measurement of deep body temperature from external auditory canal with servo-controlled heating around ear.1973
- DIAGNOSIS OF ACCIDENTAL HYPOTHERMIA OF THE ELDERLYThe Lancet, 1971
- Environmental Temperature Effect on the Secretion Rate of "Resting" and Stimulated Human Mixed SalivaJournal of Dental Research, 1970
- Climatological effects on human parotid gland functionArchives of Oral Biology, 1966
- Temperature Gradients During HypothermiaBMJ, 1959
- A comparison of temperatures measured in the rectum, œsophagus, and on the surface of the aorta during hypothermia in manBritish Journal of Surgery, 1957
- Oral, rectal and oesophageal temperatures and some factors affecting them in manThe Journal of Physiology, 1954
- The relationships between the frequency of the heart, oral temperature and rectal temperature in man at restThe Journal of Physiology, 1951