Intraoperative temperature monitoring with zero heat flux technology (3M SpotOn sensor) in comparison with sublingual and nasopharyngeal temperature

Feb 19, 2015European journal of anaesthesiology

Comparing a new skin sensor with mouth and nose probes for measuring body temperature during surgery

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Abstract

Analysis of 83 patients showed the 3M SpotOn sensor's temperature readings were almost identical to nasopharyngeal measurements, with a mean difference of 0.07 °C.

  • The 3M SpotOn sensor measured temperatures that were slightly lower than those obtained from sublingual probes by 0.35 °C.
  • Correlation coefficients indicated strong relationships between SpotOn and nasopharyngeal (0.87) as well as moderate relationships with sublingual measurements (0.77).
  • Bland-Altman analysis demonstrated a bias of 0.07 °C (standard deviation of 0.21) for SpotOn compared to nasopharyngeal readings and -0.35 °C (standard deviation of 0.29) for sublingual readings.
  • The 3M SpotOn sensor is considered adequate for clinical use based on its correlation, accuracy, and precision when compared to traditional methods.

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Full Text

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