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Major thermoregulatory defenses: Sweating, vasoconstriction, shivering

Major thermoregulatory defenses: Sweating, vasoconstriction, shivering
The major thermoregulatory defenses in humans. The threshold (triggering core temperature) for each response is shown on the Y-axis. Temperatures between the sweating and vasoconstriction thresholds define the interthreshold range, usually a few tenths of a degree Celsius (°C), temperatures that do not activate thermoregulatory defenses and thus define normal core temperature (dashed oval). Sweating activates active pre-capillary vasodilation, which moves heat towards the skin surface for dissipation to the environment. The shivering threshold is 1°C below the vasoconstriction threshold; by the time humans begin to shiver, they are thus already fairly hypothermic.
Adapted from: Lopez M, Sessler DI, Walter K, et al. Rate and gender dependence of the sweating, vasoconstriction, and shivering thresholds in humans. Anesthesiology 1994; 80:780.
Graphic 116093 Version 2.0