Concurrent validity of the CORE wearable sensor with BodyCap temperature pill to assess core body temperature during an elite women's field hockey heat training camp

Author:

Goods Paul S. R.123ORCID,Maloney Peta4,Miller Joanna4,Jennings Denise5,Fahey‐Gilmour Jack3,Peeling Peter36,Galna Brook12

Affiliation:

1. Murdoch Applied Sports Science Laboratory School of Allied Health Murdoch University Perth Western Australia Australia

2. Centre for Healthy Ageing Health Futures Institute Murdoch University Perth Western Australia Australia

3. Western Australian Institute of Sport Mt Claremont Australia

4. REST Hub, Australian Institute of Sport Canberra Australia

5. Hockey Australia High Performance Program Perth Australia

6. School of Human Sciences (Exercise and Sport Science) The University of Western Australia Perth Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTWearable temperature sensors offer the potential to overcome several limitations associated with current laboratory‐ and field‐based methods for core temperature assessment; however, their ability to provide accurate data at elevated core temperatures (Tc) has been questioned. Therefore, this investigation aimed to determine the concurrent validity of a wearable temperature sensor (CORE) compared to a reference telemetric temperature pill (BodyCAP) during a team‐sport heat training camp prior to the 2020 Olympic Games. Female field hockey players (n = 19) in the Australian national squad completed 4 sessions in hot conditions where their temperature was monitored via CORE and BodyCAP. Concurrent validity of the wearable CORE device was determined with reference to the ingested BodyCAP pill. Lin's Concordance Correlation Coefficients determined there was “poor” agreement between devices during all sessions. Mean bias demonstrated that CORE underestimated Tc in all sessions (−0.06°C to −0.34°C), with wide mean 95% confidence intervals (±0.35°C to ±0.56°C). Locally estimated scatterplot smoothing regression lines illustrated a non‐linearity of error, with greater underestimation of Tc by the CORE device, as Tc increased. The two devices disagreed more than ±0.3°C for 41–60% of all data samples in each session. Our findings do not support the use of the CORE device as a valid alternative to telemetric temperature pills for Tc assessment, particularly during exercise in hot conditions where elevated Tc are expected.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,General Medicine

Reference29 articles.

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2. Competing in Hot Conditions at the Tokyo Olympic Games: Preparation Strategies Used by Australian Race Walkers

3. Validity of devices that assess body temperature during outdoor exercise in the heat;Casa D. J.;Journal of Athletic Training,2007

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