Friday, 15 February 2019

[ ::: ♥Keep_Mailing♥ ::: ]™ Strange Things That Happen to Your Body When It's Freezing...


The human body uses some pretty incredible mechanisms to try to stay warm, whenever temperatures drop below freezing. Here are 10 weird things that happen to your body when it's freezing:

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1. Your blood vessels constrict

Your body is built to maintain a stable temperature of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit, or 37 degrees Celsius. But, what happens to your body when a temperature in your environment drops to freezing cold? Thermoreceptors in your skin sound the alarm, alerting an area of the brain called the hypothalamus. This area of the brain acts like a thermostat that's job is to maintain steady body temperature. So, when it's too cold, the hypothalamus tightens the blood vessels in your arms, hands, feet, and legs. Blood delivers heat to the skin, so if you decrease blood flow to the skin, you decrease heat loss from the skin.

2. You can become too cold if you dress too warmly

As ironic as this scenario might sound if you're outside in cold weather shoveling snow, this amount of physical work will cause your muscles to contract, generating a lot of heat, causing your core temperature to go up. According to Robert Kenefick, Ph.D. and research physiologist at the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine "In this situation, your blood vessels dilate instead of constrict, and you start sweating. If that sweat then gets trapped in your clothing, then it can start sucking heat away from your body. That's a recipe for hypothermia right there."

3. You have to urinate

Here's an irritating scenario: You use the bathroom, right before you head outdoors, but feel the need to go again soon after being outside. This happens because all that vasoconstriction (the constriction of blood vessels) forces fluid to concentrate in your core. This causes volume receptors to communicate with the hypothalamus, letting it know that it should get rid of some of that fluid, thus causing you to pee.

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8. You freeze much faster if wet

Do you notice how little kids shiver when they get out of a heated swimming pool in 80-degree weather? Kenefick says, "Water carries heat away from the body 25 times faster than air, so you can lose a great amount of heat very quickly when you're wet. Shivering is one way your body is trying to raise your core temperature back up."

9. Your skin turns white and hard

These are signs of frostbite, a condition that arises when you expose your skin to cold and freezing temperatures. Your cheeks, nose, and fingers tend to be especially vulnerable because they are getting less blood flow due to the vasoconstriction effect. Because of the shape of your fingers, it gives them more surface area relative to their size, making them more vulnerable to heat loss. Frostbite means the skin tissue has become damaged, and if severe enough, it can turn black and actually fall off. You begin to feel pain as your skin gets colder and colder, but soon, it will feel numb. And when this happens, the thermoreceptors in your skin have stopped working.

10. You make things worse if you drink alcohol

If you think that a flask of whiskey will keep you toasty, you are dead wrong. The body's first major reaction to cold is to constrict the blood vessels. However, "alcohol does the opposite—it causes peripheral vasodilation," explains Kenefick. "Those blood vessels widen and dump all this heat to the environment." So, what happens here is that your skin will feel warm, but that provides a false sense of security, because, in reality, your core temperature drops, leading to extreme hypothermia.


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