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Perioperative Accuracy of the Raiing Wireless Axillary Thermometer

Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College logo

Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College

Status

Completed

Conditions

Major Surgery Under General Anesthesia

Treatments

Device: iThermonitor (WT701)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02756910
HS-1019

Details and patient eligibility

About

A new wireless axillary thermometer from Raiing Medical uses a proprietary system, iThermonitor (WT701), to provide better estimates of core temperature than a conventional axillary probe. Improvement results in part because the axillary probe measures and records temperatures continuously every 4 seconds and includes software to compensate for ambient temperature and positional changes including arm abduction.

Whether the iThermonitor is sufficiently accurate for clinical use remains unknown. The investigators thus propose to evaluate the system in perioperative patients who often experience thermal perturbations over a range of several °C. Specifically, the investigators propose to determine the precision and accuracy of iThermonitor in surgical patients and during the initial hour of recovery. As in previous studies, the investigators will consider the thermometer sufficiently accurate for clinical use if most Raiing temperatures are within ±0.5°C of the reference temperature.

Full description

Patient characteristics, including age, height, weight, sex, and ASA status, and details of the surgery, including procedure and postoperative diagnosis will be recorded. The investigator will record the time of anesthesia induction and emergence. At 10-minute intervals during surgery, the investigator will record inspired volatile anesthetic concentration, mean-arterial pressure, type of thermal management device(s), and urine output over the previous 10-minute interval.

After induction of general anesthesia (without restriction as to type), the anesthesiologist will insert a temperature sensor into the distal esophagus. The distance will be determined by maximal heart sounds (if a stethoscope is used), or the probe will be inserted 0.48.(sitting height) - 4.4 cm. If an esophageal probe cannot be used, a thermometer can be inserted to between 10 and 20 cm into the nasopharynx. The surgical team will position a Foley catheter with temperature sensor into the urinary bladder. Ambient temperature will be recorded from an electronic probe situated at the height of the patients, well away from any heat-producing equipment.

Axillary temperature will be recorded by iThermonitor, a Raiing Medical wireless module, paired to an iPhone. An adhesive patch provided by Raiing will be used to securely position the Railing probe in a shaved axilla before the anesthesia induction. Patients will be asked to adduct the ipsilateral arm for up to 5 minutes after the probe is inserted, or until the temperature displayed on the paired iPhone is stable. Thereafter, patients will be free to move their arms.Monitored arm position during surgery will be recorded (arm tightly tucked, arm loose at side, arm abducted).

Temperatures will be recorded at 10-minute intervals during surgery and during the initial postoperative hour. Just before anesthetic emergence, the esophageal or nasopharyngeal thermometer will be removed, but the Foley catheter retained. The axillary device will then be removed after an hour of recovery, and the study concluded. The Foley catheter can be removed or retained per clinical need.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • adults having an American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status of 1-3
  • must be scheduled for surgery of the abdomen or pelvis that is expected to last 1.5-4 hours
  • require general endotracheal anesthesia and insertion of a Foley catheter

Exclusion criteria

  • patients in whom neither esophageal nor nasopharyngeal temperature monitoring is practical
  • patients in whom active intravenous infusion is required in both arms
  • patients who are allergic to hydrogel

Trial design

80 participants in 1 patient group

Surgery Patients >1.5 Hrs
Description:
Use esophageal catheter for core temperature monitoring, Foley catheter for bladder temperature monitoring, and iThermonitor (WT701) for axillary temperature monitoring
Treatment:
Device: iThermonitor (WT701)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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