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Appropriate Body Temperature

Sophia Williams

Sophia Williams

2026-03-25
4 min. read
Appropriate Body Temperature
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The human body temperature is subject to constant fluctuations and does not always remain at a constant level, changing not only in the case of illness, but also in situations requiring increased physical activity.

Elevated body temperature: symptoms, causes, and physiological regulatory mechanisms

The baseline human body temperature hovers around 37°C, though it exhibits circadian variations. In the morning hours, a reading exceeding 37.2°C indicates a subfebrile state, whereas by evening, this threshold rises to approximately 37.8°C—termed the low-grade fever range. Clinical fever is diagnosed when the temperature surpasses 38°C. Thermal regulation is governed by the hypothalamus, a brain region housing a sophisticated thermoregulatory network that sustains thermal homeostasis. The liver serves as the primary heat-generating organ, while internal temperature fluctuations are further influenced by physical exertion, cutaneous evaporation, pulmonary ventilation, and urinary excretion. The brain exhibits heightened vulnerability to hyperthermia: beyond 40.5°C, patients may experience delirium and disorientation. Extreme deviations—above 43°C or below 30°C—induce comatose states, posing an immediate life-threatening risk.

The physiological role of elevated body temperature as a defensive response

Elevated body temperature functions as a fundamental component of the body’s immune defense mechanism against pathogenic agents, frequently serving as the initial indicator of viral or bacterial infection. During the preliminary phase of fever, immediate administration of antipyretic medications is generally not recommended; instead, ensuring adequate rest and hydration may prove sufficient. Only when the elevated temperature persists over an extended period does pharmacological intervention become necessary to reduce it. It is crucial to recognize that hyperthermia is not exclusively linked to infectious processes; it may also manifest as a symptom of endocrine disorders, such as hyperthyroidism resulting from excessive thyroid hormone secretion. Additional potential causes include thermal overload due to prolonged sun exposure, adverse reactions to psychoactive substances or certain analgesic drugs, as well as a secondary symptom in oncological conditions or autoimmune diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus.

Thermal heterogeneity of the human body: variations in core temperature measurements across anatomical sites and factors affecting reading accuracy

The conventionally cited baseline of 36.6°C (97.9°F) corresponds specifically to axillary (underarm) measurement—yet this value exhibits significant anatomical variability across different body sites. Depending on the selected diagnostic approach, readings may diverge by as much as 0.5°C. For instance, oral (sublingual) thermometry, which is standard practice in Anglo-Saxon medical traditions, typically yields temperatures approximately 0.5°C higher than axillary measurements. The most precise core temperature assessments are obtained rectally, though auricular (tympanic) measurement via the ear canal has gained clinical traction in recent years. Each methodology carries inherent limitations that may compromise accuracy: cerumen impaction can distort auricular readings, inflammatory conditions of the rectal mucosa may skew rectal measurements, and unstable thermal equilibria in the axilla can lead to inconsistent axillary results. To ensure longitudinal diagnostic consistency, it is therefore advisable to maintain uniformity in measurement site selection across sequential assessments. The established reference ranges for each anatomical location are as follows: axillary (or inguinal in infants) – 36.4°C (97.5°F) with a normative range of 34.7–37.3°C (94.5–99.1°F); forehead skin surface – 36.4°C (97.5°F); oral cavity – 36.6°C (97.9°F) within 35.5–37.5°C (95.9–99.5°F); tympanic membrane – 36.6°C (97.9°F) spanning 35.7–37.5°C (96.3–99.5°F); rectal canal – 37.0°C (98.6°F) with a reference interval of 36.6–37.9°C (97.9–100.2°F).

Body hypothermia: symptoms, stages, and causes of critically low core temperature

Hypothermia constitutes a life-endangering physiological state that manifests when the body’s core temperature falls below the critical threshold of 35 degrees Celsius. This condition most commonly arises due to prolonged exposure to cold environmental conditions—such as remaining in freezing outdoor temperatures without adequate thermal protection. Nevertheless, hypothermia may also be pharmacologically induced by vasodilatory cardiovascular agents that lower blood pressure, antipyretic medications, neuroleptic psychotropic drugs, or illicit substances. The disorder progresses through several distinct stages, each marked by unique clinical presentations and varying degrees of risk to the patient’s health and survival.

Human body thermal assessment instrumentation

The contemporary marketplace is predominantly supplied with digital electronic thermometers, which—despite advancements in measurement technology—exhibit reduced accuracy when compared to traditional mercury-based thermometers. The latter were systematically phased out of circulation owing to the well-documented hazardous properties of mercury, posing significant risks to both environmental ecosystems and human health, as mandated by global safety directives. An alternative category comprises strip-style thermometers: flexible adhesive bands equipped with heat-sensitive indicators, primarily designed for rapid temperature assessment across the forehead’s surface. However, readings obtained through this method are subject to substantial variability and measurement uncertainty; consequently, such results should be regarded solely as approximate estimations, lacking the reliability required for clinical diagnostics or the monitoring of conditions necessitating precise thermal data.
Sophia Williams

Sophia Williams

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