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Urine is the same temperature as the body it leaves. If the person has a fever, the urine will be a higher temperature. This is why there is a temperature gauge on the outside of a sample bottle.
The temperature of urine in the bladder is the same as the body's core temperature. A urine temperature of higher than 100 degrees is the same as a fever of 100, and is caused by infection, dehydration, or intense exercise.
It's will be body temperature, which is typically 98.6°F; if the person is running a fever, then the urine will still be the temperature of the body.
no
No, in a simple urinary tract infection, there should not be any fever. If there is fever, it can mean a complicated infection, including pyelonephritis. On the other hand, sometimes UTIs can cause fever in children.
fever increases specific gravity of urine because when a person has fever , that person sweats alot which leads to increase in solute concentraion of body and hence more solute will be in urine . therefore making specific gravity of urine higher in person with fever
The temperature of your body maintained through homeostasis is very delicate, and the slightest change from your regular 98 degrees can mean a fever. There is a large and dangerous difference between a 99 degree fever and a 104 degree fever. Precision is also misspelled.
a fever thermometer, is a thermometer that you can use to check your body temperature.
Everyone's urine is the same temperature as their body. Normal body temperature is 98.6.
no
Fever is different from a simple rise in body temperature because a fever always results in a rise in body temperature but such a rise is not always because of a fever. A rise in body temperature could occur because of exercise or warm weather and not just because of a fever.
Normal temperature is 98.4ºF. You would have a fever with a temperature of 100.4ºF or higher.