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Use of infrared thermographic calorimetry to determine energy expenditure in preterm infants
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Use of infrared thermographic calorimetry to determine energy expenditure in preterm infants

Alexandra K Adams, Ralph A Nelson, Edward F Bell and Cesar A Egoavil
The American journal of clinical nutrition, Vol.71(4), pp.969-977
04/01/2000
DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/71.4.969
PMID: 10731505
url
https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/71.4.969View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

Background: Measurement of infant energy expenditure in the clinical setting is difficult and is rarely done. Both indirect and direct calorimetry require long measurement periods and frequent calibration. Objective: The objective of this study was to validate in infants a newly developed method of determining energy expenditure, infrared thermographic calorimetry (ITC), against an established method, respiratory indirect calorimetry (IC). ITC measures mean infant body surface temperature. ITC was used in conjunction with heat loss theory to calculate radiant, convective, evaporative, and conductive heat losses and thereby determine total energy expenditure. Design: Ten healthy preterm infants were studied by obtaining concurrent ITC and IC measurements over a 3.5-5.5-h study period. Continuous IC measurements were compared with ITC measurements taken every 10 min during study periods. IC values were summed over 10-min intervals covering the 5 min before and 5 min after each ITC measurement, to allow comparisons between the 2 methods. Results: Comparison of paired ITC and IC mean measurements for all 10 infants over the entire study period showed no significant difference between the 2 methods. However, individual paired IC and ITC values were significantly different for 7 of 10 infants. The overall mean difference between the 2 methods was 1.3%. Conclusions: ITC is an accurate, noninvasive method for measurement of heat loss and energy expenditure in healthy preterm infants, and therefore it may be a useful clinical and research tool.

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