Eye and Ear Temperature Using Infrared Thermography Are Related to Rectal Temperature in Dogs at Rest or With Exercise
Rectal body temperature (BT) has been documented in exercising dogs to monitor thermoregulation, heat stress risk, and performance during physical activity. Eye (BT ) and ear (BT ) temperature measured with infrared thermography (IRT) were compared to rectal (BT ) temperature as the reference method...
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Published in | Frontiers in veterinary science Vol. 3; p. 111 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Switzerland
Frontiers Media S.A
19.12.2016
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Rectal body temperature (BT) has been documented in exercising dogs to monitor thermoregulation, heat stress risk, and performance during physical activity. Eye (BT
) and ear (BT
) temperature measured with infrared thermography (IRT) were compared to rectal (BT
) temperature as the reference method and assess alternative sites to track hyperthermia, possibly to establish BT
IRT as a passive and non-contact method. BT measures were recorded at 09:00, 11:30, 12:30, and 02:30 from Labrador Retrievers (
= 16) and Beagles (
= 16) while sedentary and with 30-min play-exercise (pre- and 0, 15, 30-min post-exercise). Total exercise locomotor activity counts were recorded to compare relative intensity of play-exercise between breeds. BT
, BT
, and BT
were measured within 5 min of the target time. Each BT method was analyzed by analysis of variance for main effects of breed and time. Method differences were compared using Bland-Altman plots and linear regression. Sedentary BT differed by breed for BT
(
< 0.0001), BT
(
< 0.0001), and BT
(
= 0.06) with Labs having on average 0.3-0.8°C higher BT compared to Beagles. Readings also declined over time for BT
(
< 0.0001) and BT
(
< 0.0001), but not for BT
(
= 0.63) for both breeds. Total exercise (30-min) activity counts did not differ (
= 0.53) between breeds. Time and breed interaction was significant in response to exercise for both BT
and BT
(
= 0.035 and
= 0.005, respectively), with a marginal interaction (
= 0.09) for BT
. All the three methods detected hyperthermia with Labs having a higher increase compared to Beagles. Both BT
and BT
were significantly (
< 0.0001) related to BT
in all dogs with sedentary or exercise activity. The relationship between BT
and BT
improved when monitoring exercise hyperthermia (
= 0.674) versus measures at rest (
= 0.381), whereas BT
was significantly related to BT
regardless of activity (
= 0.615-0.735). Although BT readings were significantly related, method bias (
< 0.02) was observed for BT
to slightly underestimate BT
, whereas no bias was observed between BT
and BT
. This study demonstrates that IRT technology effectively measures both ear and eye temperature and enables effective monitoring of BT changes at rest, with exercise, and between breeds. However, ear, and not eye, temperature is a better reflection of rectal temperature. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 Edited by: Lynette Arnason Hart, University of California Davis, USA Reviewed by: Mitsuaki Ohta, Tokyo University of Agriculture, Japan; Joseph Wakshlag, Cornell University, USA; Vera Baumans, Utrecht University, Netherlands Specialty section: This article was submitted to Veterinary Humanities and Social Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science |
ISSN: | 2297-1769 2297-1769 |
DOI: | 10.3389/fvets.2016.00111 |