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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Comparing non-contact and rectal temperature checks in cats

By Nutt, Kelly R et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2016·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of non-contact infrared thermometry and rectal thermometry in cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study involving 188 adult cats found that using non-contact infrared thermometers (NIRT) to measure body temperature was not reliable compared to traditional rectal thermometers. While rectal thermometry is often stressful for cats, the NIRT readings were inconsistent, sometimes showing lower temperatures in healthy cats and higher in cold cats. This means that NIRT may not be a good option for accurately checking a cat's temperature, especially when assessing for fever or hypothermia. It's best to stick with rectal thermometers for accurate temperature readings in cats.

People also search for: cat temperature measurement · non-contact thermometer for cats · why is my cat's temperature low

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Body temperature is commonly used for assessing health and identifying infectious diseases in cats. Rectal thermometry, the most commonly used method, is stressful, invasive and time consuming. Non-contact infrared thermometry (NIRT) has been used with mixed success to measure temperature in humans and other species. The purpose of this study was to determine if NIRT measurements were comparable to rectal temperature measurements or, if not highly correlated, could at least identify cats in the hypothermic or hyperthermic range in need of further evaluation. METHODS: From a total of six NIRT devices and 15 anatomic sites, three devices and three sites (pinna, gingiva and perineum) with the highest correlation to rectal temperature were selected for further study. Measurements were made in 188 adult cats housed indoors at animal shelters, veterinary clinics and private homes across a wide range of body temperatures and compared with rectal temperatures. RESULTS: Bland-Altman analysis revealed poor agreement between NIRT and rectal thermometry. The mean NIRT measurements ranged from 0.7-1.3°C below the mean rectal measurements, but the effect was not consistent; NIRT measurements tended to exceed rectal measurements in hypothermic cats and fall below rectal measurements in normothermic and hyperthermic cats. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The accuracy of temperature measurements using NIRT devices is not reliable for clinical use in cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26208866/