• Acta paediatrica · Jan 2003

    Comparative Study

    How reliable is axillary temperature measurement?

    • A Falzon, V Grech, B Caruana, A Magro, and S Attard-Montalto.
    • Paediatric Department, St Luke's Hospital, Guardamangia, Malta. amarisfalzon@yahoo.com
    • Acta Paediatr. 2003 Jan 1; 92 (3): 309-13.

    AimTo assess whether axillary temperature measurements reliably reflect oral/rectal temperature measurements.MethodsThis observational study compared paired axillary-rectal and axillary-oral temperatures in a general paediatric ward with the participation of 225 children aged < or = 4 y and 112 children aged between 4 and 14 y.ResultsChanges in oral/rectal and axillary temperatures correlated significantly (p < 0.0001). However, axillary temperature measurements were significantly lower than both oral (mean -0.56 degrees C, SD 0.76 degrees C) and rectal measurements (0.38 degrees C; SD 0.76 degrees C). Ninety-five percent of axillary measurements fell within a 2.5-3 degrees C range around respective paired oral/rectal measurements. The mean difference increased with increasing temperature, and was 0.4 degrees C at low body temperatures, and over 1 degree C with a fever of 39 degrees C. Neither seasonal fluctuations nor the amount of clothing worn influenced this difference.ConclusionAxillary temperatures in young children do not reliably reflect oral/rectal temperatures and should therefore be interpreted with caution.

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