Scientific Reports (Nov 2024)

Agreement of in-ear temperature to core body temperature measures during invasive whole-body cooling for hypothermic circulatory arrest in aortic arch surgery

  • Jonas Langenhorst,
  • Aaron Benkert,
  • Sven Peterss,
  • Matthias Feuerecker,
  • Tatjana Scheiermann,
  • Patrick Scheiermann,
  • Matthias Witte,
  • Aaron Benkert,
  • Andreas Bayer,
  • Stephan Prueckner,
  • Maximilian Pichlmaier,
  • Roman Schniepp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-77237-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Targeted temperature management (TTM) with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) during aortic arch surgery requires valid estimations of core body temperature. The ear canal and epitympanic region might be an easy-to-assess, noninvasive site for the read-out of supra-aortic, cerebral temperature. This observational cohort study comparatively investigated in-ear temperature and different core body temperature (cBT) measurements during TTM/TH for moderate hypothermic circulatory arrest (mHCA) in aortic arch surgery. In total 24 patients (mean age of 56.8 ± 17.5 years; six females) were measured using infrared-thermography of the epitympanic region (BTtym), thermistor-based measurements at the esophagus (BTeso; gold standard), at the ear canal (BTear), at the nasopharynx (BTnas), in the bladder (BTves), and in the rectum (BTrec). The data analysis comprised absolute agreement (AA), bias, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and limit of agreement (LoA). The results revealed high AAs of BTtym, BTear, BTnas in reference to BTeso (biases 0.3–0.6 °C), with also excellent ICCs > 0.9. BTves and BTrec showed lower AAs, higher biases of + 2.5 °C to 3.1 °C with moderate ICCs during mHCA. In the phases of rapid temperature changes, the biases and LoAs were higher throughout all BT measurements. Herein, BTtym performed best of all measurement sites. The study informs about the BT dynamics at different body sites during the mHCA procedure. It supports the approach of using minimally invasive in-ear techniques to estimate core body temperature in an intrahospital TTM/TH setting of mHCA.

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