Validation of a new telemetric core temperature monitor
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to validate the accuracy and acceptability of the new VitalSense ® telemetric physiological monitoring system (Mini Mitter Co., Inc., Bend, OR). It consists of a receiver/monitor and a thermistor-based ingestible capsule for core body temperature measurement. For comparison, each subject was also monitored with a standard thermistor probe inserted 11 cm beyond the anal sphincter (Mini-Logger ® Series 2000). Both the measurement systems have specified accuracy of ±0.1 °C. Ten volunteers, four females, six males, mean age 51.1±11.8 years, gave informed consent to wear the two systems for the duration of the passage of the temperature capsule through their digestive tracts. Minute-by-minute comparisons were made between the temperatures recorded by the two systems. Parameters reported include: average transit time of the capsule; temperature at each minute of the experiment; mean difference in temperature at each time point; correlation coefficient for the two temperature measurements; and number of missed data points for each system. Mean capsule transit time was 48.6±35.5 h with a range of 12.4–136.2 h. The mean temperature for all subjects was 36.93 °C±0.15 °C and 36.96 °C±0.16 °C for the capsule and rectal probe respectively, with no significant difference between the means. The mean difference between readings (capsule–rectal probe) was 0.04 °C±0.03 °C. There was a significant correlation between the capsule and rectal probe temperatures,
- Publication:
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Journal of Thermal Biology
- Pub Date:
- January 2004
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2004.08.020
- Bibcode:
- 2004JTBio..29..605M
- Keywords:
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- Core temperature;
- Temperature capsule;
- Temperature telemetry