A recent review examined various methods for measuring core body temperature in children who are patients in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). The goal was to understand which techniques are most accurate for continuous monitoring without being invasive. The review compared peripheral, non-invasive, and invasive measurement methods.
The main finding was that two specific non-invasive methods—zero-heat-flux thermometry and infrared thermography—appear promising for providing continuous temperature readings. Accurate temperature assessment is important in the ICU because it helps guide timely diagnosis and therapy. The review did not report any specific safety concerns related to these methods.
The key reason to be careful is that the evidence is still early. The authors clearly state these promising methods 'require further validation across pediatric ages and clinical scenarios.' This means they need to be tested more thoroughly in real-world hospital settings with children of different ages and medical conditions.
Readers should understand this is a review of existing research, not a new clinical trial. It highlights areas where future studies should focus. For now, these methods show potential, but more research is needed before they become standard practice in children's intensive care.