Normal Body Core Temperatures[1][2]
Skin Temperature
In contrast to the core temperature, the skin temperature (shell), falls and rises with the temperature of the surroundings.
Thermoregulatory Impairment[3]
Hypothermia
Hypothermia, defined as a drop in core body temperature below 35 C (95 F), results in initial/mild impairment in the body's thermoregulatory capacity. More significant impairment occurs with increasing severity of hypothermia; severe hypothermia is defined as core body temperature dropping below 28 C (82.4 F)
Part of the reason for this diminished regulation is that the rate of chemical heat production in each cell is depressed almost 2-fold for each 10 F decrease in body temperature.
Heat Illness Spectrum
Excessive core body temperature presents along with a clinical spectrum, with heat stroke presenting as an emergent clinical condition defined by a core body temperature exceeding 40 C (104 F)
Heat production is a function of metabolism.
Heat Loss
The rate at which heat is lost is determined almost entirely by:
Brown Fat
Anterior Hypothalamic-Preoptic Area in Thermostatic Detection of Temperature
Posterior Hypothalamus Integrates the Peripheral and Central Temperature Sensory Signals
Detection of Temperature by Receptors in the Deep Body Tissues
Detection of Temperature by Receptors in the Skin
Insulator System of the Body[6][7]
Blood Flow to the Skin from the Body Core Imparts Heat Transfer
Effect of the environmental temperature on heat conductance from the body core to the skin
Basic Physics the Loss of Heat from the Skin Surface
Heat dissipated by radiation, evaporation, and conduction.
Evaporation and conduction of the air are accelerated by convection.
Evaporation Is a Necessary Cooling Mechanism at High Air Temperatures
Clothing Reduces Conductive and Convective Heat Loss
Temperature-Decreasing Mechanisms
Temperature-Increasing Mechanisms
SetPoint for Temperature Control
Artificial Hypothermia
Sweating and its Regulation by the Autonomic Nervous System
Mechanism of Sweat Secretion
The sweat gland consists of two parts: the duct that passes through the skin and reabsorbs salt and water, and the deep subdermal coiled gland that secretes the sweat.
Sweat gland secretes a fluid called the precursor secretion; the concentrations of constituents in the fluid are then modified in the duct.
Precursor Secretion
Reabsorption
Hypothalamic Stimulation of Shivering
Sympathetic "Chemical" Excitation of Heat Production
Treatment for Heat Stroke[3][9]
After following the standard ATLS resuscitation protocol (airway, breathing, circulation), the next step is to cool the body to reduce core body temperature rapidly. Whole-body cooling units on-site should be utilized. As long as the patient is stable, the rapid cooling protocol takes priority even before starting transportation to the local emergency department.
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[8] | Ray S,Sharma S,Maheshwari A,Aneja S,Kumar A, Heat stroke in an infant with hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia: brain magnetic resonance imaging findings. Journal of child neurology. 2013 Apr; [PubMed PMID: 23358631] |
[9] | Armstrong LE,Casa DJ,Millard-Stafford M,Moran DS,Pyne SW,Roberts WO, American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Exertional heat illness during training and competition. Medicine and science in sports and exercise. 2007 Mar [PubMed PMID: 17473783] |
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