What does homeothermic mean?
Maintains stable internal body temperature regardless of external influence
What is normal core body temperature?
37 +/- 0.5oC
At what temperature do proteins start to denature?
41oC
At what temperature do you lose consciousness?
Below 30oC
What does core body temperature vary with?
How is core body temperature maintained?
By balancing heat loss and heat gain

What are the different methods that thermal balance is achieved?
Convection
Conduction
Evaporation
Radiation
Heat production

What is evaporation in terms of thermal balance?
Respiration and sweating
About 600ml/day at rest
But 4L/hour at extremes and losses 600kcal/L
What is conduction in terms of thermal balance?
Heat transfer direct between touching objects
What is convection in terms of thermal balance?
Fluid conduction hence wind chill and water chill
Important in blood too
How is body temperature detected?
Cold and warm thermoreceptors

What are thermoreceptors divided into?
Where are peripheral thermoreceptors located?
Skin, especially in face and scrotum
Where are central thermoreceptors located?
Spinal cord, abdominal organs and hypothalamus
How does an increases in temperature impact a warm receptor, and a decrease in temperature impact a cold receptor?
Increases frequency

Where do peripheral and central thermoreceptors feed their sensory information into?
Hypothalamic thermoregulatory centre

What do peripheral receptors detect?
Change in environmental temperature

What do central receptors detect?
Change in core body temperature
What are different ways that heat is generated within the body in response to cold stress?
How does general metabolism generate heat?
For generating heat, what is voluntary muscular activity described as?
What is shivering thermogenesis?
In what age group is non-shivering thermogenesis significant in?
Infants due to brown adipose tissue
How is heat loss from the body reduced?