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Thermometry clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05247736 Active, not recruiting - Thermometry Clinical Trials

Principles and Test Methods of Non-contact Body Thermometry

Start date: July 22, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Long-wavelength infrared (IR) detectors have a more than 20-year history in medical thermometry and have been used widely for febrile screening. However, over the past year and a half, public health entities, medical professionals, and the general public have begun to question the claimed accuracy of non-contact body thermometry. The standard assessment of a device's performance relies on clinical testing with febrile individuals, yet this practice may have inadvertently allowed the approval of IR systems that are unable to detect moderate fevers. The ability to test device performance without relying on febrile test participants would have important ramifications for public health, especially if this test discovered undisclosed differences in accuracy in widely used devices. The aim is to examine the effect of the local environment and the physiology of the human body on the relationship between core body temperature and inner canthi (region near tear duct) skin temperature measured using non-contact thermal imaging and to use of this relationship to test actual device performance at detecting simulated elevated temperatures, without requiring volunteers having actual elevated temperatures. The overall goal of this research study is to validate and improve the science of non-contact core body temperature measurement.

NCT ID: NCT01012128 Withdrawn - Thermometry Clinical Trials

Comparison of Three Methods of Taking Temperatures in the Newborn Intensive Care Unit

Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Preterm infants will have their body temperature measured by three different devices in order to evaluate whether the newest device, a temporal artery scanning thermometer, is accurate for patients in the preterm period.