Shivering

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A woman shivering from cold

Shivering (also called shuddering) is a bodily function in response to cold and extreme fear in warm-blooded animals. When the core body temperature drops, the shivering reflex is triggered to maintain homeostasis. Skeletal muscles begin to shake in small movements, creating warmth by expending energy. Shivering can also be a response to fever, as a person may feel cold. During fever, the hypothalamic set point for temperature is raised. The increased set point causes the body temperature to rise (pyrexia), but also makes the patient feel cold until the new set point is reached. Severe chills with violent shivering are called rigors. Rigors occur because the patient's body is shivering in a physiological attempt to increase body temperature to the new set point.

Biological basis[edit]

Located in the posterior hypothalamus near the wall of the third ventricle is an area called the primary motor center for shivering.[citation needed] This area is normally inhibited by signals from the heat center in the anterior hypothalamic-preoptic area but is excited by cold signals from the skin and spinal cord. Therefore, this center becomes activated when the body temperature falls even a fraction of a degree below a critical temperature level.[citation needed]

Increased muscular activity results in the generation of heat as a byproduct. Most often, when the purpose of the muscle activity is to produce motion, the heat is wasted energy. In shivering, the heat is the main intended product and is utilized for warmth.[citation needed]

Newborn babies, infants, and young children experience a greater (net) heat loss than adults because of greater surface-area-to-volume ratio. As they cannot shiver to maintain body heat,[citation needed] they rely on non-shivering thermogenesis. Children have an increased amount of brown adipose tissue (increased vascular supply, and high mitochondrial density), and, when cold-stressed, will have greater oxygen consumption and will release norepinephrine.[citation needed] Norepinephrine will react with lipases in brown fat to break down fat into triglycerides.[citation needed] Triglycerides are then metabolized to glycerol and non-esterified fatty acids.[citation needed] These are then further degraded in the needed heat-generating process to form CO2 and water.[citation needed] Chemically, in mitochondria, the proton gradient producing the proton electromotive force that is ordinarily used to synthesize ATP is instead bypassed to produce heat directly.[citation needed]

Shivering can also appear after surgery. This is known as postanesthetic shivering.

In humans, shivering can also be caused by mere cognition.[1] This is known as psychogenic shivering.[2][3]

Shivering and the elderly[edit]

The functional capacity of the thermoregulatory system alters with aging, reducing the resistance of elderly people to extreme external temperatures. The shiver response may be greatly diminished or even absent in the elderly, resulting in a significant drop in mean deep body temperature upon exposure to cold. Standard tests of thermoregulatory function show a markedly different rate of decline of thermoregulatory processes in different individuals with ageing.[4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Goldstein A. (1980). Thrills in response to music and other stimuli. Physiol. Psychol. 8, 126–129.
  2. ^ Schoeller, F., Eskinazi, M., Garreau, D. (2018) Dynamics of the knowledge instinct: Effects of incoherence on the cognitive system. Cognitive Systems Research 47: 85-91.
  3. ^ Oka, T. (2015). Psychogenic fever: how psychological stress affects body temperature in the clinical population. Temperature: Multidisciplinary Biomedical Journal, 2(3), 368–378. http://doi.org/10.1080/23328940.2015.1056907
  4. ^ Ring, Francis J. and Phillips, Barbara, Recent Advances in Medical Thermology, pp. 31-33; Springer Publishing, 1984

External links[edit]