Temperature variation Human body temperature




1 temperature variation

1.1 hot
1.2 normal
1.3 cold





temperature variation

hot

44 °c (111.2 °f) or more – death occur; however, people have been known survive 46.5 °c (115.7 °f).
43 °c (109.4 °f) – death, or there may serious brain damage, continuous convulsions , shock. cardio-respiratory collapse occur.
42 °c (107.6 °f) – subject may turn pale or remain flushed , red. may become comatose, in severe delirium, vomiting, , convulsions can occur. blood pressure may high or low , heart rate fast.
41 °c (105.8 °f) – (medical emergency) – fainting, vomiting, severe headache, dizziness, confusion, hallucinations, delirium , drowsiness can occur. there may palpitations , breathlessness.
40 °c (104.0 °f) – fainting, dehydration, weakness, vomiting, headache, breathlessness , dizziness may occur profuse sweating. starts life-threatening.
39 °c (102.2 °f) – severe sweating, flushed , red. fast heart rate , breathlessness. there may exhaustion accompanying this. children , people epilepsy may convulsions @ point.
38 °c (100.4 °f) – (this classed hyperthermia if not caused fever) feeling hot, sweating, feeling thirsty, feeling uncomfortable, hungry. if caused fever, there may chills.

normal

36.5–37.5 °c (97.7–99.5 °f) typically reported range normal body temperature

cold

36 °c (97 °f) – feeling cold, mild moderate shivering (body temperature may drop low during sleep). may normal body temperature.
35 °c (95 °f) – (hypothermia less 35 °c (95 °f)) – intense shivering, numbness , bluish/grayness of skin. there possibility of heart irritability.
34 °c (93 °f) – severe shivering, loss of movement of fingers, blueness , confusion. behavioural changes may take place.
33 °c (91 °f) – moderate severe confusion, sleepiness, depressed reflexes, progressive loss of shivering, slow heart beat, shallow breathing. shivering may stop. subject may unresponsive stimuli.
32 °c (90 °f) – (medical emergency) hallucinations, delirium, complete confusion, extreme sleepiness progressively becoming comatose. shivering absent (subject may think hot). reflex may absent or slight.
31 °c (88 °f) – comatose, conscious. no or slight reflexes. shallow breathing , slow heart rate. possibility of serious heart rhythm problems.
28 °c (82 °f) – severe heart rhythm disturbances , breathing may stop @ time. patient may appear dead.
24–26 °c (75–79 °f) or less – death occurs due irregular heart beat or respiratory arrest; however, patients have been known survive body temperatures low 14.2 °c (57.6 °f).




^ chudler, eric h. biological rhythms . neuroscience kids. faculty.washington.edu.
^ man s temperature registered more 115.7 . bulletin journal. august 7, 1980.
^ cite error: named reference kar2008 invoked never defined (see page).
^ excerpt: humans, body extremes. guinness world records. 2004. 






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