Wireless measurement of rectal temperature during exercise may circumvent some limitations associated with the use of a conventional wired probe. We determined, for the first time, whether temperatures provided in vivo by wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pills and a rectal probe compare favorably under conditions producing slow and rapid increases and decreases in rectal temperature. While wearing a rectal probe linked to a wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pill, 13 participants completed the following phases: 1) 30 min sitting; 2) 45 min passive heat exposure (40-42 °C); 3) 45 min sitting while ingesting 7.5 g of ice slurry · kg body mass; 4) running exercise (38 °C) at 68% V˙O until a 39.5 °C increase in rectal probe temperature and; 5) cold-water (10 °C) immersion until a 1.5 °C decrease in rectal probe temperature. Acceptable differences between devices were taken as ≤ 0.3 °C. Mean differences within phases were all < 0.3 °C, whereas 95% limits of agreement ranged from ±0.2 °C to ±0.4 °C, coefficient of variations from ±0.3% to ±0.6% and typical error of measurements from ±0.1 °C to ±0.2°. Of the 14881 rectal temperature values measured over the experiment with the wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pills and rectal probe, 91% of the differences between devices were found to be ≤ 0.3 °C. Results suggest that rectal temperatures provided by a wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pill used as a suppository agree with those of a conventional wired probe. Hence, rectal temperature can reliably be measured using a wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pill as a suppository.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtherbio.2019.05.010 | DOI Listing |
BMC Nephrol
December 2020
School of Physical Education, Sport Science and Dietetics, University of Thessaly, Trikala, 42100, Greece.
Background: The separate and combined effects of intradialytic exercise training (IET) and cold dialysis (CD) on patient thermoregulation remain unknown. This study assessed the thermoregulatory responses of hemodialysis patients under four different hemodialysis protocols: a) one typical dialysis (TD) protocol (dialysate temperature at 37 °C), b) one cold dialysis (CD) protocol (dialysate temperature at 35 °C), c) one typical dialysis protocol which included a single exercise bout (TD + E), d) one cold dialysis protocol which included a single exercise bout (CD + E).
Methods: Ten hemodialysis patients (57.
J Therm Biol
July 2019
Faculty of Physical Activity Sciences, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, P.Q., Canada; Research Centre on Aging, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, P.Q., Canada. Electronic address:
Wireless measurement of rectal temperature during exercise may circumvent some limitations associated with the use of a conventional wired probe. We determined, for the first time, whether temperatures provided in vivo by wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pills and a rectal probe compare favorably under conditions producing slow and rapid increases and decreases in rectal temperature. While wearing a rectal probe linked to a wireless ingestible thermometric telemetric pill, 13 participants completed the following phases: 1) 30 min sitting; 2) 45 min passive heat exposure (40-42 °C); 3) 45 min sitting while ingesting 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Biomed Eng
January 2019
Human Performance and Sports Science Laboratory, University of Murcia, c/Argentina s/n Santiago de la Ribera, Murcia, Spain.
This experiment investigates the validity of six thermometers with different measuring sensors, operation and site of application, to estimate core temperature (T) in comparison to an ingestible thermometric sensor based on quartz crystal technology. Measurements were obtained before, during and after exercise in the heat, controlling the presence of air-cooling and skin sweating. Twelve well-trained men swallowed the ingestible thermometer 6 h before the trial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
October 1991
Department of Radiology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL 60611.
We have investigated the potential of an ingestible thermometric system (ITS) for use with a deep heating system. The ingestible sensor contains a temperature-sensitive quartz crystal oscillator. The telemetered signal is inductively coupled by a radiofrequency coil system to an external receiver.
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