• Eur J Anaesthesiol · Feb 2012

    Comparative Study Controlled Clinical Trial

    Correlation, accuracy, precision and practicability of perioperative measurement of sublingual temperature in comparison with tympanic membrane temperature in awake and anaesthetised patients.

    • Jan Höcker, Berthold Bein, Ruwen Böhm, Markus Steinfath, Jens Scholz, and Ernst-Peter Horn.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Schwanenweg 21, Kiel, Germany. hoecker@anaesthesie.uni-kiel.de
    • Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2012 Feb 1;29(2):70-4.

    Background And ObjectiveThe prevention of inadvertent perioperative hypothermia requires precise, reliable and practical methods of temperature measurement in both awake and anaesthetised patients. Different methods and sites of monitoring have been evaluated, but many are imprecise, unusable in awake patients, difficult to apply or too invasive, especially for minor surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of perioperative sublingual and tympanic temperature measurement in awake and anaesthetised patients.MethodsWe enrolled 171 patients, aged 18-75 years, scheduled for surgery with duration less than 1 h under general anaesthesia. Spearman's rank correlation and Bland-Altman analysis for assessment of correlation, accuracy and precision of both methods were determined analysing 171 independent paired values at three different measurement times.ResultsSublingual temperatures were significantly higher than tympanic temperatures by 0.1-0.2°C. The coefficient of determination (r) of both methods was between 0.50 and 0.59, and Bland-Altman analysis revealed a bias (SD) of between -0.09 (0.21) and -0.15 (0.24)°C.ConclusionThe accuracy and precision of sublingual temperature measurement were adequate for clinical use, and there was a high correlation with tympanic temperature monitoring. Sublingual temperature measurement has been demonstrated as a good and practical modality for perioperative temperature monitoring in both awake and anaesthetised patients.

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