Fibromyalgia & Chronic Pain LIFE Winter 2014, Issue 10 | Page 8

The Perfect Number for Health by Michael Smith PhD MD Sc 98.6 º Have you checked your temperature lately? If you are frequently cold, cannot tolerate drafts or air conditioning, you may suffer from hypothermia (low temperature). This article will explain why maintaining homeothermia is absolutely critical to your health. H omeothermia means constant temperature. For much of life all mammals and birds perform at a constant temperature; for mammals this is 98.6°F and for birds this temperature is about 102°F. The exception is hibernation, the slowing of physiological function and the drastic lowering of body temperature during deep sleep. Hibernation is quite routine during winter for many rodents and bears, and nightly for birds like our Arizona hummingbirds. The underlying reason for this is not the drop of outside temperature during winter but the lack of food. The exception for bears proves the point: tropical bears do not hibernate, neither do many polar bears. As long as the polar bear can find a seal to eat, it remains outdoors and the body temperature runs at about 98.6°F. At the moment it seems impossible for humans to hibernate. Irreversible cell damage occurs if the human temperature is lowered below about 88°F for any length of time, factoring in a subject’s health, age and monitoring. There is universal agreement that humans were meant to function at 98.6°F and deviation from this is always serious. One reason is that neurons are extremely dependent upon a constant supply of nutrients and begin to malfunction if this supply is even slowed down. Another reason is that many enzymes of all cells have very temperaturesensitive properties. The catalytic abilities of many enzymes are drastically altered or even quenched entirely if the cell temperature is lowered by even a few degrees. Stop an enzyme and the cell eventually dies. 8  Fibromyalgia & Chronic Pain Life Winter 2014 In addition, critical components of each cell are thousand of proteins made by translation from DNA and RNA, which need to stay hydrated to keep cells alive. Protein hydration is highly temperature dependent. Many proteins become insoluble (clump up) as the temperature is raised. Once these proteins clump up, they cannot function and the cell dies. Without homeothermia, the very elemental form of all systems in the mammalian body–neurons, organs, tissues, and so forth–are adversely threatened. Body heat is generated by three primary methods: mechanical, electrical and chemical. The four major organs generating body heat are the brain (electrical), heart (mechanical), liver (chemical), and kidneys (chemical and electrical). MECHANICAL. The first method is mechanical friction. As you move your joints and muscles, you create heat. Even with our wonderfully lubricated shoulders, knees and hips we create a fair amount of heat during motion. Another friction pathway is the heat liberated as our muscle fibers slide across each other during contraction and relaxation. If we are out in the cold without protection we use this process to heat up by shivering. This is simply high frequency, small muscle contractions and relaxations. W hile capable of liberating an enormous amount of heat, shivering is tiresome and cannot be maintained for long. Another process for mechanical heat liberation is blood circulation. The heart liberates an enormous amount of heat during pumping and red blood cells, sub cells and plasma liberate heat as these slide around the capillaries.