Submitted by Pheophyting t3_yi3t9o in askscience
To my very dumbed down knowledge, the hypothalamus pulls some regulatory stuff to get pyrogens like IL-1 to circulate in the body which somehow adjusts the body's "thermostat" to default to a higher temperature.
My question is, how does this actually generate a fever? Where is the increased heat/thermal energy actually coming from?
CharlesOSmith t1_iuhrqly wrote
You are right, it is surprisingly difficulty to find the type of information you are asking about when you include the word "fever" in your search.
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Our body heat is regulated by our body's ability to balance of how much heat we generate and how much heat we lose to the environment.
Here are some examples of heat production (notice how many are simply the result of normal metabolims):
-Basal metabolism
-Muscle activity, by shivering and muscle contractions
-Extra metabolism caused by the effect of sympathetic stimulation and norepinephrine, -epinephrine on the cells
-Extra metabolism caused by increased chemical activity in the cells, especially when the cell -temperature increases
-Extra metabolism caused by thyroid hormone and, to a lesser extent, testosterone and -growth hormone on the cells
-Extra metabolism needed for digestion, absorption, and storage of food
-Most of the heat produced in the body is generated in the liver, brain, heart, and skeletal -0--muscles during exercise.
And we balance that by also regulating mechanisms of heat Loss which is determined almost entirely by:
-How rapidly heat transfers from the skin to the surroundings
-How rapidly heat is conducted from where it is produced in the body core to the skin
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK499843/
A fever triggers an adjustment of where that balance is, so as metabolic processes are triggered to run hotter, our circulatory system is triggered to allow less heat loss through our skin, and we don't sweat.
The term "a fever broke" is referring to a person who after a fever has begun to sweat to allow for the rapid loss of all that heat.
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4786079/
Fever induction and signal transmission