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Temporal Artery Thermometer in Patient Transport: Reliability and Validity. (TAT)

O

Ornge Transport Medicine

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Body Temperature

Treatments

Other: Measurement of temperature using non-invasive means

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03920943
Ornge 2018-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Evaluate the reliability and validity of temperature measurements using an existing, Health Canada-approved, non-invasive temporal artery thermometer, and comparing results to an established, invasive gold standard (esophageal probe), in order to assess reliability of this non-invasive method to measure core body temperature in the setting of patients undergoing inter-facility patient transport by land, rotor-wing, and fixed-wing transport vehicles.

Full description

Interfacility patient transport can put the patient at risk a drop in body temperature. This drop can harmful to patients with particular illnesses (trauma, stroke, post cardiac arrest), and the very young or old. Measuring temperature and preventing temperature drops are challenging in the transport setting. The temporal artery thermometer (TAT) is widely available, easy to use, non-invasive way to measure body temperature. TAT is believed to be a good tool for paramedics to measure body temperature in the transport setting. However, the evidence on reliability and validity of TAT-derived temperature measurements is lacking because the TAT has not been evaluated in the transport setting. The goal of this study is to evaluate the reliability of the TAT device and compare measures of temperature with an established standard in a broad range of patients undergoing interfacility transport by land ambulance, and rotor- and fixed-wing aircraft.

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

The study will include patients who meet all of the following criteria:

  • intubated
  • mechanically ventilated
  • transported for emergent or urgent indications
  • transported between January 1 and December 31, 2019.

Exclusion criteria

The study will exclude patients with any one of the following:

  • transports non-urgent conditions
  • scheduled transports (for appointment, repatriations, or similar)
  • patients who are not intubated and mechanically ventilated
  • patients with contraindications to temperature probe insertion (esophageal stricture, varices or perforation; upper or lower gastrointestinal bleeding; congenital tracheo-esophageal abnormalities; post-operative patients with ear, nose, and throat or upper airway surgery; facial trauma or anatomic abnormalities; coagulopathy; anticoagulant use)
  • scene responses
  • patients transported posthumously
  • patients in whom an invasive temperature monitoring probe was not inserted

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 1 patient group

Core and TAT measurements
Other group
Description:
As part of the standard of care, flight paramedics will insert an esophageal or rectal temperature probe in patients meeting including criteria to enable continuous temperature monitoring. Paramedics will measure core temperature on at least two occasions, the first measurements made at least 5 minutes after insertion of the temperature probe, and also prior to departure from the sending facility.
Treatment:
Other: Measurement of temperature using non-invasive means

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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