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Body Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4
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Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Jan 29, 2016

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Page 1: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Body Temperature RegulationChapter 6 Sections 4

Page 2: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Objectives• Explain how the skin helps to regulate body temperature

• Describe wound healing

• Distinguish among the types of burns, including a description of healing with each type

Page 3: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

What is Normal Body Temperature?• Most people think of a "normal" body temperature as an

oral temperature of 98.6°F (37°C).

• This is an average of normal body temperatures.

• Your temperature may actually be 1°F (0.6°C) or more above or below 98.6°F (37°C).

• Also, your normal body temperature changes by as much as 1°F (0.6°C) throughout the day, depending on how active you are and the time of day.

• Body temperature is very sensitive to hormone levels and may be higher or lower when a woman is ovulating or having her menstrual period

Page 4: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Regulation of Body Temperature• Is vitally important to maintain metabolic functions

• Even a slight temperature shift can slow down or speed up metabolic reactions

• The deeper body parts remain close to a set point of 37°C or 98.6°F

• The maintenance of a stable temperature requires that the amount of heat the body loses be balanced by the amount it produces

• The skin is responsible for maintaining the balance

Page 5: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Heat Production• Heat is a product of cellular metabolism

• The major heat producers are skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle and liver cells

• When body temperature rises above the set point, the nervous system stimulates structures in the skin and other organs to release heat

Page 6: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

An Example• During physical activity active muscle release heat, which the blood

carries away

• The warmed blood reaches the hypothalamus of the brain, which controls the set point of body temperature

• The hypothalamus signals muscles in the walls of dermal blood vessels to relax

• As these vessels dilate (vasodilation), more blood enters them, and some of the heat the blood carries escapes to the outside

• At the same time, the deeper blood vessels contract (vasoconstriction), diverting blood to the surface and the skin reddens

• The heart is stimulates to beat faster, moving more blood out the deeper regions

Page 7: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Heat Loss--Radiation

• The primary means of body heat loss is radiation, by which infrared hear rays escape from warmer surfaces to cooler surroundings

• These rays radiate in all directions

Page 8: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Heat Loss—Conduction & Convection

• Conduction and convection release less heat than does radiation

• In conduction, heat moves from the body directly into the molecules of cooler objects in contact with its surface

• For example, heat is lost by conduction into the seat of a chair when a person sits down

• In convection, continuous circulation of air over a warm surface causes the air to become heated as it moves away from the body

Page 9: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Heat Loss--Evaporation

• When the body temperature rises above normal, the nervous system stimulate eccrine sweat glands to release sweat onto the surface of the skin

• As this fluid evaporates (changes from a liquid to a gas), it carries heat away from the surface, cooling the skin

Page 10: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Heat Loss Summary

Page 11: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Body Temperature Drops• When the body temperature drops below the set point, muscles in the

walls of dermal blood vessels are stimulated to contract

• This action does the following:

• Decreases the flow of heat-carrying blood through the skin

• Cause the skin to lose color

• Helps to reduce heat loss by radiation, conduction and convection

• sweat glands remain inactive, decreasing heat loss by evaporation

• If the body temperature continues to drop, the nervous system will stimulate skeletal muscle cells throughout your body to contract slightly, increasing cellular respiration and production of heat

• If this response is not enough to raise the body temperature back to normal, small groups of muscles rhythmically contact with greater force, causing you to shiver

Page 12: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Process of Body Temperature Regulation

Page 13: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Problems in Temperature Regulation• Sometimes the temperature-regulating mechanism does not work

effectively

• Such as on hot humid days when the air becomes saturated with water vapor• When this happens, sweat glands may be activated, but the sweat

cannot quickly evaporate

• Thus, you are wet but still hot and uncomfortable

• In addition, if the air temperature is too high heat loss by radiation is less effective and a person can gain heat from the surroundings

• Two dangerous situations can occur when temperature regulation fails:• Hyperthermia

• Hypothermia

Page 14: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Hyperthermia• Occurs when the core body temperature exceeds 106°F

• The skin becomes dry, hot and flushed

• The person can experience feelings of weakness, become dizzy and nauseous, have a headache, and a rapid, irregular pulse

Page 15: Body Temperature RegulationBody Temperature Regulation Chapter 6 Sections 4Chapter 6 Sections 4.

Hypothermia• Better known as lowered body temperature

• Results from prolonged exposure to cold or as part of an illness

• It begins with shivering and a feeling of coldness

• If not treated, it progresses to mental confusion, lethargy, loss of reflexes, loss of consciousness, and eventually the complete shutdown of your vital organs

• Even if your body’s core temperature drops only a few degrees, fatal respiratory failure or heart arrhythmia

• Your extremities can withstand drops of 20°F to 30°F below normal

• Some people are more prone to this because of less adipose tissue beneath the skin, advance age, too thin, and the homeless