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- R O Wright, G D Jay, B M Becker, and J G Linakis.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, RI, USA.
- Am J Emerg Med. 1995 May 1; 13 (3): 281-4.
AbstractA study was conducted to determine the accuracy of tympanic thermometers for measuring the temperature of warmed fluids in fluid bags and in tubing at the delivery site (ie, beside the intravenous [IV] catheter). One-liter 0.9% saline bags were warmed in a microwave oven. A thermocouple electronic temperature probe was then used to measure the reference temperature. The probe was inserted into each bag and bathed in the fluid. Temperature changes were recorded simultaneously over a 20-minute period using the probe and a First Temp Tympanic Thermometer (Intelligent Medical Systems, Inc, Carlsbad, CA). The warmed fluid was then allowed to run through microdrip IV tubing. Temperature of the effluent was measured in the tubing using the tympanic thermometer externally and the probe internally at the same point. The two measures were compared using linear regression and Student's t tests. Overall, the correlation between the two probes was r = 0.99 for both the fluid bags and the IV tubing. The overall mean differences were small, 0.7 degrees C and 1.2 degrees C for the bags and tubing, respectively, but they were statistically different (P > .05). Data were analyzed in three temperature ranges: < 36 degrees C, 36 degrees C to 41 degrees C, and 41 degrees C. Again, small differences were found on the order of 1 degree C. It was concluded that infrared thermometry is an accurate method for measuring the initial and delivery temperature of warmed fluids. Although tympanic thermometer measurements were statistically different from reference readings in certain temperature ranges, these differences were small and not clinically significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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