You can get possible brain damage from a long lasting high fever.
It is a mild/high fever of about 101.7f and if it goes any higher it is not safe. Specialists say anything over 101 is high.
Yes. The water is not warm enough to keep the body at a high enough temperature. People begin experiencing hypothermia symptoms when their body temperature drops ~2 degrees F below their average.
a dangerously high body temperature would be anything above 39 degrees C
Heat is conducted form the high temperature body to the low temperature body until their temperatures are the same.
no
when body temperature becomes too high the proteins in the body can ''denature'' or lose their shape, becoming functionless
Many things can increase the body's core temperature, including:exerciseeating--digestion -- creates energy that converts to heatinfectionbrain injury or dysfunctionIf the body's temp goes too high or climbs too fast, the person may be critically ill.
If your brain overheats, you instantly die.
36.5 - 37.5 is normal body temperature
This is not possible. Heat always move from a body of high temperature to a body of low temperature.
a dangerously high body temperature would be anything above 39 degrees C
The normal body temperature is 98.6