Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Eastern Health, 8 Arnold Street, Box Hill, Melbourne, VIC, 3128, Australia.
School of Public Health and Prevention Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
J Clin Monit Comput. 2022 Aug;36(4):1029-1036. doi: 10.1007/s10877-021-00731-y. Epub 2021 Jun 17.
To assess the accuracy and precision of infrared cameras compared to traditional measures of temperature measurement in a temperature, humidity, and distance controlled intensive care unit (ICU) population. This was a prospective, observational methods comparison study in a single centre ICU in Metropolitan Melbourne, Australia. A convenience sample of 39 patients admitted to a single room equipped with two ceiling mounted thermal imaging cameras was assessed, comparing measured cutaneous facial temperature via thermal camera to clinical temperature standards. Uncorrected correlation of camera measurement to clinical standard in all cases was poor, with the maximum reported correlation 0.24 (Wide-angle Lens to Bladder temperature). Using the wide-angle lens, mean differences were - 11.1 °C (LoA - 14.68 to - 7.51), - 11.1 °C ( - 14.3 to - 7.9), and - 11.2 °C ( - 15.23 to - 7.19) for axillary, bladder, and oral comparisons respectively (Fig. 1a). With respect to the narrow-angle lens compared to the axillary, bladder and oral temperatures, mean differences were - 7.6 °C ( - 11.2 to - 4.0), - 7.5 °C ( - 12.1 to - 2.9), and - 7.9 °C ( - 11.6 to - 4.2) respectively. AUCs for the wide-angle lens and narrow-angle lens ranged from 0.53 to 0.70 and 0.59 to 0.79 respectively, with axillary temperature demonstrating the greatest values. Infrared thermography is a poor predictor of patient temperature as measured by existing clinical standards. It has a moderate ability to discriminate fever. It is unclear if this would be sensitive enough for infection screening purposes. Fig. 1 Bland-Altman plots for temperatures measured using clinical standards to infrared camera. a Wide-angle camera versus bladder temperature. b Narrow-angle camera versus bladder temperature.
评估在温度、湿度和距离受控的重症监护病房 (ICU) 环境中,与传统体温测量相比,红外摄像机的准确性和精密度。这是在澳大利亚墨尔本大都市的一家单一中心 ICU 进行的前瞻性、观察方法比较研究。对安置在配备有两个天花板安装热成像摄像机的单人房间中的 39 名患者进行了评估,比较了通过热摄像机测量的皮肤面部温度与临床体温标准。在所有情况下,未经校正的相机测量与临床标准的相关性均较差,报告的最大相关性为 0.24(广角镜头至膀胱温度)。使用广角镜头,平均差异分别为-11.1°C(LoA -14.68 至-7.51)、-11.1°C(-14.3 至-7.9)和-11.2°C(-15.23 至-7.19),用于腋部、膀胱和口腔比较(图 1a)。与腋部、膀胱和口腔温度相比,窄角镜头的平均差异分别为-7.6°C(-11.2 至-4.0)、-7.5°C(-12.1 至-2.9)和-7.9°C(-11.6 至-4.2)。广角镜头和窄角镜头的 AUC 范围分别为 0.53 至 0.70 和 0.59 至 0.79,其中腋部温度的 AUC 值最大。红外热成像技术是一种预测患者体温的不良方法,其测量值与现有临床标准相比。它具有中等程度的识别发热的能力。尚不清楚它是否足以用于感染筛查目的。图 1 用于测量临床标准与红外摄像机的温度的 Bland-Altman 图。a 广角相机与膀胱温度。b 窄角相机与膀胱温度。