Infrared Skin Thermometry: Validating and Comparing Techniques to Detect Periwound Skin Infection.

Adv Skin Wound Care

Asfandyar Mufti, BMSc, is a Medical Student, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Ranjani Somayaji, MD, MPH, BScPT, FRCPC, is a Clinical Lecturer, Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Patricia Coutts, RN, is a Clinical Nurse, Mississauga Regional Wound Healing Clinic, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. R. Gary Sibbald, BSc, MD, DSc (Hons), MEd, FRCPC (Med Derm), FAAD, MAPWCA, is Professor, Medicine and Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Director, International Interprofessional Wound Care Course & Masters of Science in Community Health (Prevention & Wound Care), Dalla Lana Faculty of Public Health, University of Toronto; Past President, World Union of Wound Healing Societies; and Clinical Editor, Advances in Skin & Wound Care, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Published: January 2018

Objective: Diagnosis of wound infection can be challenging because it relies on a combination of clinical signs and symptoms that are often nonspecific. Increased periwound cutaneous temperature is a classic sign of deep and surrounding wound infection, and its quantitative measurement is one of the most reliable and valid clinical signs of deep and surrounding skin infection at the bedside. Skin surface temperature differences may be detected using commercially available noncontact infrared thermometers. However, techniques to detect temperature using noncontact infrared thermometers vary, and no studies have evaluated these methods. Two such measurement techniques include the "4-point" and "whole-wound" scanning methods. This study assessed the ability of different infrared thermometers using the aforementioned techniques to detect clinically meaningful differences in periwound cutaneous temperatures used in the diagnosis of wound infection.

Methods: A prospective cohort study was conducted from 2015 to 2016 of consenting adult patients 18 years or older with an open wound attending a regional wound care clinic. One hundred patients with wounds underwent surface temperature measurement. Infection was not a specific inclusion criterion as the primary objective was to conduct a comparative assessment of infrared thermometry devices. Demographic data (age, height, weight, gender, and ethnicity) were also collected. Each wound was measured using 4 different noncontact infrared thermometers: Exergen DermaTemp 1001 (Exergen Corporation, Watertown, Massachusetts), Mastercraft Digital Temperature Reader (Mastercraft, Toronto, Ontario, Canada), Mastercool MSC52224-A (Mastercool Inc, Randolph, New Jersey), and Etekcity ETC-8250 Temperature Heat Pen (Etekcity, Anaheim, California). Data analysis was based on a comparison of 4 periwound skin surface temperature measurement differences (ΔT in degrees Fahrenheit) between the wound site and an equivalent contralateral control site.

Outcome Measures: The primary outcome of the ability of each thermometer to detect a clinically significant difference in temperature was assessed with χ analysis. Paired t tests were conducted to compare the ΔT measurements of each specific thermometry device between the 2 measurement techniques. Pearson product moment correlation coefficients were calculated for the temperature ΔT for both measuring techniques for all devices to determine level of agreement. A 1-way analysis of variance was conducted to compare temperature measurements among the infrared thermometry devices.

Main Results: There was no significant difference in the ability of each thermometer to detect a clinically meaningful difference of 3° F by either the 4-point (P = .10) or whole-wound techniques (P = .67). When a definition of 4° F was used, results were similar (4-point, P = .15; whole wound, P = .20). Comparisons among devices and techniques showed strong correlations (>0.80). Etekcity ETC-8250 and the 4-point measurement compared with the Exergen device using the whole-wound technique had a correlation coefficient of 0.72. Spearman ρ demonstrated a similarly high degree of correlation between techniques and devices, and only the Etekcity ETC-8250 device had a coefficient of 0.71 to 0.90 when compared with others. Paired t testing for each thermometry device comparing measurement techniques for raw temperatures ΔT demonstrated no significant difference (P > .05). No statistical differences among the ΔT values for the 3 different thermometers were noted when using the whole-wound method (P = .095). Similarly, no significant differences among the ΔT values were noted for the 4 different thermometers when using the 4-point method (P = .10).

Conclusions: The results of this study demonstrate that both the 4-point and whole-wound methods of temperature acquisition using cost-efficient infrared thermometers provide accurate and similar results in clinical wound care settings.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.ASW.0000527352.75716.70DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

infrared thermometers
20
techniques detect
12
surface temperature
12
noncontact infrared
12
measurement techniques
12
detect clinically
12
etekcity etc-8250
12
differences Δt
12
temperature
11
techniques
10

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!