Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03265756

Multimometer - Vital Signs Device for Diagnosis of Pneumonia

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
350 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Alberta · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
5 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Pneumonia is a major cause of illness in young children. The investigators are developing and testing a new thermometer like device called Multimometer, to measure the respiration rate (RR), temperature, heart rate (HR) and the degree of blood oxygenation (SpO2) of children who may suffer from pneumonia. These are called vital signs and their measurements greatly help to diagnose pneumonia. In the first part of the study, and in order to optimize and better align the size of the device with the face, the investigators will measure the average size and dimensions of young children's face. In the second part of the study, the investigators will compare the vital signs measurements with measurements obtained by other commonly used devices in ill children who are suspected to suffer from pneumonia.

Detailed description

A. Improve the universality of the mouth-interface using facial anthropometry techniques. For this first part of the study, the investigators will use a portable 3D camera (as previously used by our group) to acquire 250 3D facial images of healthy children under 5yrs of age in the DRC. While in hospital/clinic, the investigators will use a three-dimension (3D) special camera to obtain an image of the child's face. The child can sit on the lap of the parent and we will take the image. The image acquisition takes less than 30 seconds. There are no specific requirements from the child, and the image can be taken if the child is asleep or awake, cry or settled. No medical or identifying information will be collected. All the computerized images will be cluster analyzed (using previously established methodologies from the Technion, Israel) and three 3D average faces of all small, medium and large faces will be constructed. The investigators will use these "faces" to design better Multimometers with improved mouth-interface for this population. B. Integrate into the current device a reflexive pulse oximeter sensor which will allow measurements of oxygen saturation and heart rate. For the addition of HR and SpO2 measurements, the investigators will integrate a reflective pulse oximetry chip into the probe. Together with the manufacturer (RespiDx Inc., Israel) the investigators will design and manufacture optimal prototype devices suitable for performing clinical trials on this population. C. Compare vital signs measurements by Multimometer® to simultaneous vital signs measurement using conventional devices. For this part of the study, repeated (x5 times) measurements of the 4 vital signs in 50 young children (under 5 yrs) in hospital/clinics in Butembo DRC with suspected pneumonia, will be recorded using the Multimometer. These signs will also be measured at the same time, by conventional methods (regular thermometers for temperature, observed respiratory rate using recorded chest movements and end-tidal carbon dioxide (CO2) for respiratory rate, standard pulse oximeters for oxygen saturation and heart rate). All these measurements take less than 5 minutes. The investigators will repeat these sets approximately 5 times during the same day in the hospital or during a clinic visit. The vital signs will be compared between the two methods using Pearson's correlation coefficient and using Bland-Altman plots for agreement.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMultimometerA device for measuring respiration rate, temperature, heart rate and the degree of blood oxygenation of children

Timeline

Start date
2017-06-20
Primary completion
2018-09-30
Completion
2018-09-30
First posted
2017-08-29
Last updated
2018-11-21

Locations

2 sites across 2 countries: Canada, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03265756. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.