A person's "normal" body temperature of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit can fluctuate 1 degree Fahrenheit or more above or below 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit depending on the location at which the temperature is taken. A spike in body temperature is a fever which would be an oral temperature in excess of 100 degrees Fahrenheit in an adult and 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit in a child. Brain damage can occur if the fever is over 107.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Hypothermia is when the body temperature falls below 97 degrees Fahrenheit.
Yes, it rises your body temperature. If you have a fever it will rise it it a lot.
Because ur body try's to kill the virus by heating up or burning it
Because they don't go that high. Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. Body temperature is 37 degrees Celsius, so there's no need for a clinical thermometer to cover a range much higher than expected for body temperature; they might need to go up to say 45 tops (and if someone has a body temperature of 45 degrees Celcius, they're either dead or dying).
Increase the body temperature.
u can't it goes up since its hot in there
Good questiion. No it typically doesnt. It will go up and down due to the diseases that the cold weather may bring. For example, if you have a cold in the winter, your body temperature may go down a degree or two.
It is standard. Your basal temperature initially lowers to indicate you are ovulating. A spike in temperature during the middle of your cycle indicates that you have finished ovulating. When you are pregnant, your temperature will stay high, rather than return to its cycle.
basically you can go naked outside, not get sick, unless if you have a warm body temperature... But if your body is using up its immune system to heat up the body, "sicknesses" can start to occur because your body has to be heated up even though your cold. Also you get the sicknesses through a virus that's in the air...
I would say temp between 95 and 97 Around 98.6. It is normal though that your temperature can be higher or lower. At night your temperature should go up.
high temperature will speed up the trace
When you shiver, your body is trying to warm up because your body knows that something is cold and it is touching your skin so the pours on your skin close up and the hairs on your body stand up so it can capture heat and once your hairs go down it traps the heat making sure that your body is warm. So yes, shivering does increase your body temperature.
A