Thermoregulation – How the Body Controls Temperature
Thermoregulation is the body´s ability to maintain a stable core temperature of around 37 °C, regardless of changes in the external environment.
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Thermoregulation is the body´s ability to maintain a stable core temperature of around 37 °C, regardless of changes in the external environment.
What is Thermoregulation?
Thermoregulation is the physiological process by which the human body maintains its core temperature within a narrow range of approximately 36.5 to 37.5 °C (97.7 to 99.5 °F). This ability is essential for survival, as many enzymatic reactions, metabolic processes, and organ functions can only work optimally within this temperature range.
Humans are homeotherms (warm-blooded), meaning they actively regulate body temperature independently of the surrounding environment.
How Does Thermoregulation Work?
The primary control center for thermoregulation is the hypothalamus in the brain. Acting like a thermostat, it receives signals from temperature receptors in the skin and internal organs, and triggers appropriate responses to restore balance.
Heat Production (Thermogenesis)
- Shivering: Involuntary muscle contractions generate heat when the body is cold.
- Non-shivering thermogenesis: Brown adipose tissue produces heat through metabolic activity, particularly important in newborns.
- Metabolic heat: Organs such as the liver and muscles continuously generate heat as a byproduct of normal metabolism.
Heat Dissipation
- Sweating (evaporation): Evaporation of sweat from the skin surface cools the body effectively.
- Increased skin blood flow: Vasodilation of skin blood vessels promotes heat loss to the environment.
- Radiation and convection: Heat is transferred directly from the body surface to the surrounding air.
Heat Conservation
- Vasoconstriction: Narrowing of skin blood vessels reduces heat loss in cold conditions.
- Piloerection (goosebumps): In animals, raising body hair improves insulation; in humans, this effect is minimal.
- Behavioral adaptation: Wearing warm clothing, seeking shelter, or adjusting physical activity.
Factors Affecting Thermoregulation
Several internal and external factors can influence the body´s ability to regulate temperature effectively:
- Age: Infants and elderly individuals have less efficient thermoregulatory mechanisms.
- Medical conditions: Fever, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, and neurological disorders can impair thermal regulation.
- Medications: Certain drugs such as beta-blockers or diuretics can affect sweating or blood circulation.
- Environmental conditions: High humidity reduces the effectiveness of sweating as a cooling mechanism.
- Physical activity: Exercise significantly increases heat production in the body.
Disorders of Thermoregulation
When thermoregulation fails, serious medical conditions can arise:
- Hyperthermia: Overheating of the body (e.g., heat stroke), where core temperature rises to dangerous levels.
- Hypothermia: A drop in core body temperature below 35 °C (95 °F), which can be life-threatening.
- Fever (pyrexia): A regulated increase in core temperature in response to infection or inflammation -- unlike hyperthermia, fever is a controlled physiological response.
Clinical Relevance
Understanding thermoregulation is important across many medical fields, including emergency medicine (treatment of heat stroke or hypothermia), intensive care, pediatrics, and sports medicine. In certain surgical procedures, body temperature is deliberately lowered -- a technique known as therapeutic hypothermia -- to protect organs from damage during reduced blood flow.
References
- Silbernagl, S. & Despopoulos, A. (2015). Color Atlas of Physiology. 7th Edition. Thieme.
- World Health Organization (WHO). Thermal environment and health. Available at: https://www.who.int
- Romanovsky, A. A. (2018). The thermoregulation system and how it works. Handbook of Clinical Neurology, 156, 3–43. PubMed PMID: 30454585.
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Related search terms: Thermoregulation + Thermal regulation + Body temperature regulation