Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How ear and rectal temperature compare in healthy cats
By Sousa, Marlos G et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2013·College of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Agreement between auricular and rectal measurements of body temperature in healthy cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A study involving 29 healthy cats found that measuring body temperature in the ear can be just as accurate as the traditional method of taking it rectally. Over two weeks, researchers compared temperatures taken from both sites and found that the readings were very similar, making ear measurements a reliable option. This could help reduce stress for cats during vet visits, as many pets find rectal temperature checks uncomfortable. Overall, using an ear thermometer could be a good alternative for checking your cat's temperature.
People also search for: cat temperature measurement · ear thermometer for cats · how to take cat's temperature · why is my cat's temperature important
Abstract
Measurement of body temperature is a routine part of the clinical assessment of a patient. However, this procedure may be time-consuming and stressful to most animals because the standard site of temperature acquisition remains the rectal mucosa. Although an increasing number of clinicians have been using auricular temperature to estimate core body temperature, evidence is still lacking regarding agreement between these two methods in cats. In this investigation, we evaluated the agreement between temperatures measured in the rectum and ear in 29 healthy cats over a 2-week period. Temperatures were measured in the rectum (using digital and mercury-in-glass thermometers) and ear once a day for 14 consecutive days, producing 406 temperature readings for each thermometer. Mean temperature and confidence intervals were similar between methods, and Bland-Altman plots showed small biases and narrow limits of agreement acceptable for clinical purposes. The interobserver variability was also checked, which indicated a strong correlation between two near-simultaneous temperature readings. Results are consistent with auricular thermometry being a reliable alternative to rectal thermometry for assessing core body temperature in healthy cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23090330/