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03/13/20

The older you get, the more important your muscle mass becomes. Not only are strong muscles a requirement for mobility, balance and the ability to live independently, but having reserve muscle mass will also increase your chances of survival1 when sick or hospitalized.

Muscle is lost far more easily and quicker than it’s built, so finding ways to continuously promote and maintain your muscle mass is really crucial, especially as you get older.

Age-related loss of muscle mass is known as sarcopenia, and if you don’t do anything to stop it you can expect to lose about 15% of your muscle mass between your 30s and your 80s.2 An estimated 10% to 25% of seniors under the age of 70 have sarcopenia and as many as half those over the age of 80 are impaired with it.3

In the lecture above, Brendan Egan, Ph.D., associate professor of sport and exercise physiology at the School of Health and Human Performance and the National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology at Dublin City University in Ireland, reviews the latest research on exercise training for aging adults, which places a significant focus on building and maintaining muscle, and the nutritional components that can help optimize training results.

Muscle Strength and Function in Relation to Muscle Size

While it’s true that larger muscle is indicative of stronger, more functional muscle, it’s not a true 1-to-1 relationship. As noted by Egan, “you can have situations where you can gain back function without necessarily gaining muscle size.” To illustrate this point, Egan presents data from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, which looked at leg strength and lean muscle mass.

While declines in muscle mass and strength are relatively well-synchronized in the 35- to 40-year-old group, strength dramatically drops off as you get into the 75-year-old and over groups, with 85-year-olds seeing dramatic declines in strength and function relative to the decline in muscles size.

Speed as a Measure of Functional Muscle Capacity

One way to measure functional capacity in older adults is gait (walking) speed, which is a strong predictor of life expectancy. Data suggest that if you have a walking speed of 1.6 meters (about 5.2 feet) per second (approximately 3.5 mph) at the age of 65, your life expectancy is another 32 years, meaning you may live into your late 90s.

Having a walking speed at or below the cutoff for sarcopenia, which is 0.8 meters (about 2.6 feet) per second, your life expectancy would be another 15 years, which means you’d be predicted to live to 80. At this speed, you would not be able to make it safely across a typical pedestrian crossing before the light changes to red.

Strength as a Predictor of Survival

Strength can also tell us a lot about an individual’s chances of survival. Egan presents data from a study in which people’s chest and leg press strength were measured to arrive at a composite score of whole body strength. The pattern is quite revealing, showing the strongest one-third of the population over 60 had a 50% lower death rate than the weakest.

Exercise guidelines recommend getting 150 minutes of aerobics exercise and two strength training sessions per week. As noted by Egan, you need both. It’s not just one or the other.

Research shows aerobic exercise in isolation reduces your all-cause mortality by 16% and strength training-only reduces it by 21%, whereas if you do both, you reduce your all-cause mortality by 29%.4 Disturbingly, U.K. data suggest only 36.2% of adults over the age of 30 meet aerobic guidelines, and a minuscule 3.4% meet strength training guidelines.

Part of the problem may be that many don’t want to go to the gym. But there’s little difference between doing gym-based strength training and doing bodyweight resistance training at home.

The Danger of Bedrest and Disuse Atrophy

As noted by Egan, enforced bedrest, such as acute hospitalization, can have a dramatic impact on your muscle mass. For example, a 2015 review5 in Extreme Physiology & Medicine notes you can lose 2.5% of your muscle mass in the first two weeks of bedrest. By Day 23, you can have lost up to 10% of your quadriceps muscle mass. As explained in this review:6

“Skeletal muscle mass is regulated by a balance between MPS [muscle protein synthesis] and MPB [muscle protein breakdown]. In a 70-kg human, approximately 280 g of protein is synthesized and degraded each day.

The two processes are linked … as facilitative or adaptive processes, whereby MPS facilitates (allows modulation of muscle mass) and MPB adapts (limiting said modulation).

When exposed to an anabolic stimulus, MPS rises. MPB rises too, but to a lesser amount, resulting in a net synthetic balance. In response to an anti-anabolic stimulus, MPS decreases and MPB decreases to a lesser degree, resulting in a net breakdown.

The interaction between critical illness and bed rest may result in greater muscle loss compared to bed rest alone. The musculoskeletal system is a highly plastic and adaptive system, responding quickly to changing demands. Relatively short periods of immobilization decrease MPS, with no effect on MPB.

Furthermore, this altered balance is relatively resistant to high dose amino acid delivery … Immobilization has significant effects on peripheral muscle aerobic capacity, contractility, insulin resistance and architecture.

Microvascular dysfunction occurring in severe sepsis is associated with immobilization and may have an additive effect on reducing MPS. In critically ill patients, MPS is reduced even with nutritional delivery, with increased MPB seen, leading to a net catabolic state and thus muscle wasting.”

Research7 has shown even healthy young subjects in their 20s can lose 3.1 pounds of muscle mass in a single week of bedrest. This is why it is so important to have a reserve in case you wind up in the hospital and lose this much muscle mass. It may take you the better part of a year to regain that muscle, as gaining muscle mass is hard work and many elderly fail to do so.

The loss of muscle mass also significantly decreases your insulin sensitivity. One of the reasons for this has to do with the fact that muscle tissue is a significant reservoir for the disposal of glucose. Your muscle tissue also produces cytokines and anti-inflammatory myokines that play an important role in health.

Concurrent Exercise Training

While three to five sessions of aerobic exercise and two or more strength sessions per week may sound like a lot, for many, the lack of time is a restricting factor. However, some of these sessions can be done together. “That’s called concurrent exercise training,” Egan says.

He goes on to cite research looking at time matched concurrent exercise in the elderly, 65 and older, where an aerobic training group and a strength training group were compared to a group that spent half of their session doing aerobic exercise and the other half doing resistance training. All groups spent the same overall time exercising (30 minutes, three times a week for 12 weeks).

In terms of leg strength, the concurrent training group had better responses to training than aerobic or strength training alone. There was little difference in lean body mass, meaning they didn’t necessarily bulk up, but they had a 50% increase in strength nonetheless. They also lost more body fat around the trunk area. In short, concurrent training appears to give you more bang for your buck.

Blood Flow Restriction Training

One of the reasons I’m so passionate about blood flow restriction (BFR) training is because it has the ability to prevent and widely treat sarcopenia like no other type of training.

There are several reasons why BFR is far superior to conventional types of resistance training in the elderly. Importantly, it allows you to use very light weights, which makes it suitable for the elderly and those who are already frail or recovering from an injury. And, since you’re using very light weights, you don’t damage the muscle and therefore don’t need to recover as long.

While most elderly cannot engage in high-intensity exercise or heavy weightlifting, even extraordinarily fit individuals in their 60s, 70s and 80s who can do conventional training will be limited in terms of the benefits they can achieve, thanks to decreased microcirculation. This is because your microcirculation tends to decrease with age.

With age, your capillary growth diminishes, and capillary blood flow is essential to supply blood to your muscle stem cells, specifically the fast twitch Type II muscle fiber stem cells. If they don’t have enough blood flow — even though they’re getting the signal from the conventional strength training — they’re not going to grow and you’re not going to get muscle hypertrophy and strength.

BFR, because of the local hypoxia that is created, stimulates hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF1a) and, secondarily, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which acts as “fertilizer” for your blood vessels. VEGF allows your stem cells to function the way they were designed to when they were younger.

What’s more, the hypoxia also triggers vascular endothelial growth factor, which enhances the capillarization of the muscle and likely the veins in the arteries as well. Building muscle and improving blood vessel function are related, which is why BFR offers such powerful stimulus for reversing sarcopenia.

In short, BFR has a systemic or crossover training effect. While you’re only restricting blood flow to your extremities, once you release the bands, the metabolic variables created by the hypoxia flow into your blood — lactate and VEGF being two of them — thereby spreading this “metabolic magic” throughout your entire system. To learn more, please see my special report, “What You Need to Know About BFR,” and “BFR Training for Muscle Mass Maintenance.”

Nutrition for Muscle Maintenance

It should come as no surprise that there is an important synergy between nutrition and exercise. When it comes to muscle building and maintenance, amino acids, the building blocks of protein, are of particular importance.

In the podcast above, Megan Hall, scientific director at Nourish Balance Thrive delves into this topic at greater depth and reviews the current recommended daily allowances of protein compared to the optimal levels needed to support muscle mass and strength in at various life stages.8

Research9 looking at post-prandial protein handling and amino acid absorption shows 55.3% of the dietary protein of a given meal is in circulation within five hours after eating, which significantly increases muscle protein synthesis.

Research10 suggests healthy young adult men “max out the protein synthesis signal from a given meal” at a dose of 0.24 grams of protein per kilogram of total bodyweight, or 0.25 grams of protein per kilogram of lean body mass.

The current U.S.-Canadian recommended dietary protein allowance is 0.8 g/kg/d (0,36/grams/pound/day), but healthy older adults may actually require about 1.20 g/kg/d or .55 grams/pound/day. According to this study:11

“Our data suggest that healthy older men are less sensitive to low protein intakes and require a greater relative protein intake, in a single meal, than young men to maximally stimulate postprandial rates of MPS [myofibrillar protein synthesis].

These results should be considered when developing nutritional solutions to maximize MPS for the maintenance or enhancement of muscle mass with advancing age.”

Amino acids also act as signaling molecules that trigger muscle growth. Leucine is a particularly potent signaling agent, although all of the amino acids are required to actually build the muscle. The richest source of leucine (which helps regulate the turnover of protein in your muscle), by far, is whey protein. In fact, it can be difficult to obtain sufficient amounts of leucine from other sources.

The typical requirement for leucine to maintain body protein is 1 to 3 grams daily. However, to optimize its anabolic pathway, research shows12 you need somewhere between 8 and 16 grams of leucine per day, in divided doses.13,14

To reach the 8-gram minimum, you’d have to eat nearly 15 eggs.15 Whey, on the other hand, contains about 10% leucine (10 grams of leucine per 100 grams of protein).16 So, 80 grams of whey protein will give you 8 grams of leucine.

Time-Restricted Eating Adds Benefits

One of the problems with Egan is that he’s not very literate on time-restricted eating. During the question and answer portion, an audience member asks him about it and he admits he hasn’t studied it.

This is important because restricting your eating window to six to eight hours, which means you’re fasting 14 to 18 hours each day, would make it far easier for each of the meals to be over the leucine threshold. It will also activate autophagy, which is another factor essential for optimal muscle growth.

Autophagy is a self-cleaning process in which your body digests damaged cells, which in turn encourages the proliferation of new, healthy cells. The harder your workout, the more autophagy you will activate.

So, I recommend fasting for as long as you can before your morning workout, and then, shortly thereafter, have your largest meal of the day with plenty of high-quality protein, making sure you get several grams of leucine and arginine, both of which are potent mTOR stimulators.

The mTOR pathway is an important key for protein synthesis and muscle building. As explained in David Sabatini’s excellent review paper “mTOR at the Nexus of Nutrition, Growth, Ageing and Disease,” published in Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology:17

“Over the past two and a half decades, mapping of the mTOR signaling landscape has revealed that mTOR controls biomass accumulation and metabolism by modulating key cellular processes, including protein synthesis and autophagy.

Given the pathway’s central role in maintaining cellular and physiological homeostasis, dysregulation of mTOR signaling has been implicated in metabolic disorders, neurodegeneration, cancer and ageing.”

In summary, fasting activates autophagy, allowing your body to clean out damaged subcellular parts. Exercising while fasted maximizes autophagy even further. In fact, exercising while you are fasting for more than 14 to 18 hours likely activates as much autophagy as if you were fasting for two to three days. It does this by increasing AMPK, increasing NAD+ and inhibiting mTOR.

Refeeding with protein after your fasted workout then activates mTOR, thus shutting down autophagy and starting the rebuilding process. These two processes need to be cyclically activated to optimize your health and avoid problems.

Muscle Health Is Central to an Active Lifestyle

As noted by Egan, “Hopefully I've convinced you that muscle health is central to active lifestyles. There's been this increased awareness of muscle size, but I think we need to emphasize the idea about strength and function. These are the things that are easiest to change with the right type of training.”

In short, if you want to increase muscle size and strength, then there’s no getting around resistance training. It simply must be part of your exercise prescription, and concurrent training, where you’re combining aerobic and strength training in a given session is a time-efficient model.

BFR is also a particularly excellent way to ensure you’re getting effective strength training without the risks of conventional strength training using heavy weights, and is easy to combine with exercises such as walking and swimming. You simply wear the BFR bands while walking or exercising as normal.

Defy Aging by Improving Your Muscle Mass

In my February 2020 interview with Ben Greenfield, author of “Boundless: Upgrade Your Brain, Optimize Your Body & Defy Aging,” we discuss the importance of strength training and getting the appropriate amount of protein to build and maintain your muscle mass and optimize mitochondrial density and biogenesis.

In summary, Greenfield recommends a fitness program that includes the following types of exercise in order to target the main pathways involved in health and aging:

High-intensity interval training once a week to boost mitochondrial density and biogenesis — Brief spurts of exercise followed by longer rest periods. Greenfield recommends a 3-to-1 or 4-to-1 rest-to-work ratio.

Muscle endurance training two to three times a week to improve lactic acid tolerance — An example is the classic Tabata set, which has a 2-to-1 work-to-rest ratio.

Longer training sessions twice a week to improve your VO2 max — To target and improve your VO2 max, you’ll want your training sessions to be longer, about four to six minutes in duration with four to six minutes of recovery in between, for a 1-to-1 work-to-rest ratio.

Examples include The New York Times' seven-minute workout18 and bodyweight training done in a fast explosive manner or with a very light medicine ball, sandbag or kettle bells.

Long walk once a week to improve your stamina — Greenfield recommends taking a 1.5- to three-hourlong walk, bike ride or paddle session — anything where your body is engaged in chronic repetitive motion for a long period of time — preferably in a fasted state. Alternatively, do 20 to 30 minutes of fasted cardio followed by a cold shower.

Super-slow weight training once or twice a week to improve muscle strength — Alternatives include elastic band training systems and blood flow restriction (BFR) training. You can also combine BFR with super-slow training.



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Sleep is a curious thing. For decades, many considered sleeping to be a poor use of their time. Yet, a growing body of evidence now points to the importance of sleep in relation to many facets of health and wellness. Sleep deprivation has been linked to heart disease,1 accidents2 and cognitive impairment.3

A lack of sleep increases your risk for Alzheimer's disease4 as well as insulin resistance,5 which is the root cause of many chronic conditions. Sleep quality and quantity are important to your health, as demonstrated by one study that showed that interrupted sleep may be as dangerous as getting no sleep at all.6

How you wake up is also important, it turns out. The time after waking up, when you're still groggy, is called sleep inertia. During this time most of us aren't performing at our best.7

The Sleep Council describes sleep inertia as a period that lasts from five to 30 minutes, but sometimes as long as four hours.8 Basically, it's a time of transition between being asleep and being fully awake and alert, marked by "an increase of sleepiness, confusion, disorientation of behavior and deterioration of work performance."9

How You Transition Out of Sleep Affects Alertness

A research team from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University in Australia gathered data on sleep inertia and the relationship to how you transition from sleep to wakefulness.

The Australian team found that how you transition from being asleep to being awake has an impact on your ability to be alert in the coming hours, overcoming sleep inertia. The study10 was published in PLOS|One and suggested the sounds you hear as you wake up have an influence on your initial daytime performance.

They used an online questionnaire to gather information from 50 participants who answered questions about what they preferred to hear when they woke up, how they felt about the sound and their perception of symptoms of sleep inertia they experienced after waking.

Interestingly, their analysis of the data did not show a relationship among the three. But they did find that sounds that were identified as more melodic (not the standard "beep beep" from an alarm clock) were associated with reported reductions in the respondents' perceptions of sleep inertia.

Sounds that were ranked as "neither unmelodic nor melodic" were associated with an increase in sleep inertia. While this data may help you appreciate being more alert first thing in the morning, it may be even more important for first responders who may be called from a deep sleep to an emergency requiring quick, clear thinking. Lead researcher Stuart McFarlane commented in a press release:11

"If you don't wake properly, your work performance can be degraded for periods up to four hours, and that has been linked to major accidents. You would assume that a startling 'beep beep beep' alarm would improve alertness, but our data revealed that melodic alarms may be the key element.

This was unexpected. Although more research is needed to better understand the precise combination of melody and rhythm that might work best, considering that most people use alarms to wake up, the sound you choose may have important ramifications.

This is particularly important for people who might work in dangerous situations shortly after waking, like firefighters or pilots, but also for anyone who has to be rapidly alert, such as someone driving to hospital in an emergency."

What's Your Sleep Cycle?

When you sleep your brain cycles through several phases. A full cycle in healthy sleep will last from 90 to 110 minutes.12 Each cycle has several stages of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.

A full sleep cycle starts out in light sleep and progresses through to deep sleep, then reverses back from deep to light sleep before entering REM. You cycle through each of these stages four to five times during the night, and this cycling is tremendously important, from both a biological and psychological perspective.

  • Stage 1 — This is the lightest stage that is sometimes called a drowsy sleep stage. It's during this stage you'll sometimes feel like you're falling as your muscles relax and your brain slows. Occasionally you'll experience muscle spasms that may temporarily wake you.
  • Stage 2 — During this stage of NREM sleep brain waves continue to slow and your body temperature and heart rate begin to drop.
  • Stage 3 — This is deep NREM and is the most restorative stage. Awakening during this stage is rare and is when most sleepwalking and sleep talking occur.
  • REM — This is commonly known as the dreaming stage when you have rapid eye movement from side to side. You can wake up more easily during REM, but it will leave you feeling groggy.

You will usually go through three to five REM cycles in the night and end with one right before waking. If you are awakened before completing a REM cycle you go through a period of sleep inertia that can last several hours.

Importance of Light, Melatonin and Rhythm to Feeling Rested

Your sleep cycle and how rested you feel when you wake up are partially dependent on how much light you get in the morning and at night, your melatonin production and your circadian rhythm. Let's start with light.

During the daytime hours, sun light and blue light from your digital devices may help boost your attention span and mood.13 But, they likely have a similar effect at night when your body is trying to slow down and sleep. Unfortunately, the proliferation of digital devices and low energy lights has boosted your exposure to the blue light wavelength at all hours of the day and night.

The second effect blue light has is to shut down your production of melatonin, a hormone important to the quality of sleep you get. This means your exposure to blue light boosts your mood and energy and shuts off melatonin, factors that affect your sleep quantity and quality. This helps manage your circadian rhythms in the morning, but it's something you want to avoid before going to bed.

These two factors — blue light and melatonin — play roles in your circadian rhythm, a term used to describe the 24-hour cycle of physiological processes, including sleep and wake cycles.14 For most people, the biggest dip in energy comes between 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. when most people are asleep, and within the first two hours after lunch.

Your circadian rhythm is controlled by the pineal gland, a small area in your brain, that is in turn affected by light. When your eyes see dark, a signal is sent to release melatonin, which helps you fall asleep faster and more soundly.

But with exposure to blue light at night, your melatonin production is slowed and your quality of sleep is reduced.15 In other words, each factor plays a significant role in the quality and quantity of nighttime sleep.

Working the Night Shift Adds a New Burden

Those who work the night shift may have personal experience with a reduction in their melatonin levels early in the morning as they drive home from work, just before they hope to fall asleep. In this short video, Dr. James Hamblin takes a humorous view on some of the options night shift workers have to reduce the effect on their body.

While flipping your sleep-wake cycle on its head is damaging to your health, working the night shift consistently is better than doing it intermittently as it allows you to establish a regular sleep-wake schedule. If you do work night shifts, then there are several strategies that may help:

Blue-blocking glasses — When the objective is to fall asleep once you get home, you don't want to be exposed to blue light first thing in the morning. Consider wearing blue blocking sunglasses as you drive home and until you go to bed.

Blue light when you wake up — You'll also want to trigger your body to shut off melatonin when you wake up to go to work. The best blue light is from the sun as it is balanced. But obviously the sun is not up if you are getting up at night. So I suggest creating an artificial day-night environment by using a conventional clear incandescent bulb as well as a cool white (blue enriched) LED bulb.

You need both, not one or the other, as the LED will give you the blue and the incandescent will give you the balancing red and near infrared spectrum. You will only need to use the bluish LED light for 15 to 30 minutes, to help establish your new sleep wake cycle when you wake up.

Remember that it will be virtually impossible to imitate the full-spectrum and brightness of natural sunlight, even with a high-quality UV lamp, cool white LED bulbs and bright incandescent lights.

Black-out curtains and sleep mask — Regular curtains don't block the light from outside. Black-out curtains and a sleep mask will help boost your melatonin production. Shut off any computers, cell phones, alarm clocks or other pieces of digital equipment that emit light or electromagnetic fields that may jeopardize quality sleep.

Pay attention to mitochondrial health — Strategies such as optimizing your vitamin D, nutritional ketosis, intermittent fasting, exercise and supplements are factors I discussed in an interview with Rhonda Patrick, Ph.D., in "How Your Mitochondria Influence Your Health."

Avoid sleeping pills — The side effects may cause more harm than good. Better alternatives include using Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT), listening to a brainwave synchronization tape or trying a natural sleep remedy that can help you relax without the side effects.

Tips to Help You Sleep Soundly

Lost sleep has a cumulative effect on your health.16 Using an alarm with pleasing musical sounds to easily transition from sleep to being awake is just one aspect of protecting your health and safety. If you struggle with falling asleep or staying asleep, you'll want to consider the tips from "Top 33 Tips to Optimize Your Sleep Routine."

At every different stage in life, humans have different requirements for sleep. You'll discover how much is necessary for everyone in your family and you'll find a list of health conditions associated with sleep deprivation in the article.

By optimizing your bedroom, preparing yourself for sleep, undertaking a few lifestyle suggestions to enhance your sleep and using a melodic alarm clock to transition into your day, you may be surprised by how good you feel each morning.



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A new study reveals that the language people use on Facebook subtly changes before they make a visit to the emergency department (ED). A team of researchers provides more evidence that social media is often an unseen signal of medical distress and could be used to better understand the contexts in which patients seek care, such as during the current COVID-19 pandemic.

from Top Health News -- ScienceDaily https://ift.tt/3cWIMOC

Newly published research provides the first analysis of potential targets for effective immune responses against the novel coronavirus. Researchers used existing data from known coronaviruses to predict which parts of SARS-CoV-2 are capable of activating the human immune system.

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Normal body temperature is 98.6˚ F, right?

That’s certainly what we’re all taught, and it’s the right answer on a test. I know it seems crazy, but 98.6˚ F may not, in fact, represent the best estimate of normal body temperature. Not only that, but normal body temperature may be falling over time, according to data samples reaching back almost 160 years.

Where did 98.6 degrees come from?

In the mid-1800s a German physician, Carl Wunderlich, measured axillary (armpit) temperatures from about 25,000 people and found that the average was 98.6˚ F (37˚ C). And so we’ve believed that ever since.

But more modern studies have called this time-honored truth into question, and have found that

  • Body temperature varies over the course of the day. It tends to be higher later in the day.
  • It also varies among individuals. Women tend to have higher body temperature than men, and younger people tend to have higher temperatures than older folks.
  • Normal body temperature seems to be falling over time. An analysis of 20 studies between 1935 and 1999 found that the average oral temperature was 97.5˚ F. And a 2017 study of more than 35,000 people found an average body temperature of 97.9˚ F.

On this last point, a remarkable new study is among the best to make a case that normal body temperature has been drifting down over the last two centuries.

Are humans getting cooler?

In this study, researchers analyzed temperature recordings from three periods of time over 157 years:

  • 1860–1940: A mix of armpit and oral temperatures of nearly 24,000 veterans of the Civil War were measured.
  • 1971–1975: Oral temperatures of more than 15,000 people from a large population study (the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey) were analyzed.
  • 2007–2017: Oral temperatures of more than 150,000 people in another large research project (the Stanford Translational Research Integrated Database Environment) were reviewed.

During the nearly 160 years covered by the analysis, the average oral temperature gradually fell by more than one degree. As a result, the “new normal” seems closer to 97.5˚ F.

This observation held up even after accounting for age, gender, body size, and time of day.

Why would average body temperature be falling?

Two key possibilities are:

  • Lower metabolic rate: One of the biggest determinants of body temperature is your metabolic rate. Like a car engine that’s idling, your body expends energy just keeping things going, and that generates heat. A lower metabolic rate in modern times could be due to higher body mass (some studies link this with lower metabolic rate), or better medical treatments, preventive measures, and overall health.
  • Lower rates of infection and inflammation: In Wunderlich’s day, tuberculosis, syphilis, chronic gum disease, and other inflammatory conditions that can raise body temperature were common, and treatments were limited.

What about changes in how body temperature is measured?

The method of temperature measurement varied in this latest research. But the researchers downplayed the possibility that different ways of measuring temperature might have affected the results. Average body temperature dropped even over decades of time when methods of measurement did not change.

Why body temperature — and changes over time — matter

Body temperature is vital to health — that’s why it’s among the “vital signs,” along with blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing rate routinely checked by your doctor. These measures are absolutely critical when evaluating someone who may be sick, because significant abnormalities can indicate major, even life-threatening, illness.

Thousands of chemical reactions occurring simultaneously and continuously in the body require a rather narrow range of temperature. As a result, the body does not tolerate wide fluctuations in temperature very well. In fact, severe hypothermia (low body temperature) or hyperthermia (high body temperature) may cause permanent organ damage or death. That’s why the body has such an elaborate thermoregulation system that keeps the body’s temperature close to ideal most of the time.

Fever is typically any temperature above 100˚ F. The most common cause of fever is any infection in the body, but there are other causes, including heat stroke or a drug reaction. Although you can be sick with a normal temperature, body temperature is clearly an important and useful indicator of health.

Metabolic rate, infection, and inflammation in the body all influence human health and longevity. So, a falling average body temperature over the last century and a half could reflect important changes and warrant additional research.

The bottom line

While news that the normal body temperature may be drifting down over time is intriguing, it is not cause for alarm — and it doesn’t mean the definition of fever should change. We’ll need to rely on additional research to tell us how important these findings may be. In the meantime, it’s probably time to abandon the assumption that 98.6˚ is a normal temperature. Something closer to 97.5˚ may be more accurate.

The post Time to redefine normal body temperature? appeared first on Harvard Health Blog.



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