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PHYSIOLOGY OF THERMOREGULATION Conserving and dissipating body heat Thermoregulation is the ability of an organism to keep its body temperature within certain boundaries, even when the surrounding temperature is very different. Thermoregulation is one aspect of homeostasis. A circadian (daily) pattern of body temperature fluctuation The integrator. • The HYPOTHALAMUS of the brain is the thermostat and integrator (control center) for temperature. Homeostasis: Your perception of being hot or cold depends on the balance between heat production and loss Factors that produce heat BMR – basal metabolic rate – the energy released during minimal physical activity (at rest). Factors that produce heat When cold, your hypothalamus stimulates muscles to contract – which produces heat. If that isn’t enough, small groups of muscles contract rhythmically with even more force which is shivering! Factors that produce heat Physical exercise – Muscle work is inefficient; a lot of energy is "lost” as heat. Factors that produce heat • Hormones – The thyroid hormone is thermogenic. It increases body heat production. • DIT (diet-induced thermogenesis) –Heat is produced during the act of propelling, digesting, absorbing, and metabolizing food. Factors that produce heat Posture – curling up in a ball reduces your surface area so there’s less opportunity for loss of body heat Factors that release heat Posture can also be used to reduce body temperature. Stretching out increases surface area having the opposite effect. Factors that release heat • Radiation – Loss of body heat by infrared (IR) heat waves into the environment. • Conduction – Transfer of heat from the body to a solid object (like clothing or a cold bench). Factors that release heat • Convection – Warmed air moves away from the body, replaced with cooler air, cycle repeats (water also) • Evaporation – As sweat evaporates from skin, it carries the heat away • Blood vessels also play a direct role in thermoregulation • Vasoconstriction: less blood sent to extremities, keeping core warm • Vasodilation: more blood enters skin capillaries for heat loss • When humidity is high, the sweat glands are still activated but the sweat can’t evaporate because the air is already saturated. • If your body can’t release the heat, hyperthermia ensues • This can lead to weakness, dizziness, cramping, dehydration, and even stroke Hypothermia is when your body cannot retain enough body heat. This can lead to frostbite and other skin lesions, limb loss, and brain death Hypothermia is induced in cardiac patients & some surgeries to decrease oxygen needs. What is brown fat? Brown fat is thermogenic fat. It is common in marine mammals. Infants have several deposits of brown fat to help them stay warm. As we age, we lose our brown fat pads • Normal adipose tissue (white fat) stores lipids. Brown fat has more mitochondria which use the lipids to generate heat.