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Handheld infrared thermometer to evaluate cellulitis: the HI-TEC study
Affiliation:Division of Infectious Diseases, Rambam Health Care Campus and The Ruth and Bruce Rappaport, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology, Israel;Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA;Faculty of Medicine, Paris University (Paris-Diderot), 75010, Paris, France
Abstract:ObjectivesDifferentiating cellulitis from pseudocellulitis is challenging, and misdiagnosis leads to unnecessary antimicrobial use and increased healthcare expenditure. Clinical diagnosis remains the criterion standard and may involve expert consultation. Our objective was to evaluate the usefulness of a handheld infrared thermometer to improve diagnostic certainty in cases of suspected cellulitis.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study from August 2018 to January 2020 at a tertiary-care hospital in Montreal, Canada. We enrolled adult patients with suspected limb cellulitis. Using the infrared thermometer, we compared the average temperature of the affected area with that of the contralateral limb, and we used Youden's method to determine the optimal temperature difference which best differentiated cellulitis from pseudocellulitis as determined by an independent and blinded infectious diseases specialist. We used bootstrapping to estimate 95% confidence intervals for the sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating curve.ResultsOf 65 patients screened for enrolment, 52 patients were recruited (median age: 64 years, IQR 52–76); 39 of these were diagnosed with cellulitis and 13 were not. The mean temperature difference between affected and unaffected limbs was 2.6°C (95%CI 2.1–3.1°C) for patients with cellulitis and 0.4°C (95%CI –1.2°C to 2.1°C) for patients without (p < 0.001). An average temperature difference between limbs of 0.8°C or more was 95% sensitive (95%CI 74–100%) and 69% specific (95%CI 44–95%) for the diagnosis of cellulitis (c-statistic 0.82).ConclusionsIn this proof-of-concept single-centre study, a handheld infrared thermometer was a useful aid to differentiate cellulitis from pseudocellulitis.
Keywords:Cellulitis  Infrared thermometer  Pseudocellulitis  Diagnosis  Erysipelas
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