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Medicine

98.6 Degrees Fahrenheit Isn't the Average Anymore (smithsonianmag.com) 148

schwit1 shares a report from The Wall Street Journal: Nearly 150 years ago, [German physician Carl Reinhold August Wunderlich] analyzed a million temperatures from 25,000 patients and concluded that normal human-body temperature is 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. In a new study, researchers from Stanford University argue that Wunderlich's number was correct at the time but is no longer accurate because the human body has changed. Today, they say, the average normal human-body temperature is closer to 97.5 degrees Fahrenheit (Warning: source paywalled; alternative source).

To test their hypothesis that today's normal body temperature is lower than in the past, Dr. Parsonnet and her research partners analyzed 677,423 temperatures collected from 189,338 individuals over a span of 157 years. The readings were recorded in the pension records of Civil War veterans from the start of the war through 1940; in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 1971 through 1974; and in the Stanford Translational Research Integrated Database Environment from 2007 through 2017. Overall, temperatures of the Civil War veterans were higher than measurements taken in the 1970s, and, in turn, those measurements were higher than those collected in the 2000s.
The study has been published in the journal eLife.
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98.6 Degrees Fahrenheit Isn't the Average Anymore

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  • Obvious, to me. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @05:13AM (#59632302)

    Average blood flow is much reduced nowadays. Because people just stay inside and sit on a chair, doing barely any manual work at all.

    I remember the times when your body was always "glowing" from working, outside, in the cold even. Peope were fitter.
    Nowadays it's not necessary anymore. Which is both a good and a bad thing. (Digestion, the immune system's circuatory system, and several other faxtors depend on us moving [mostly walking] a lot.)

    This can even be tested: Check the temperatures of people in places where manual labor and walking are common, versus places whete they aren't.
    But we'd also have to check for warm climate vs cold climate and inside vs outside work, to get a useful result.

    • That sounds right. It fits in with one of the obvious causes of oveweight and obesity: not enough physical work, combined with plentiful tempting food and drink.

      Success breeds failure.

      • I was thinking even more simply...that everyone is so fscking FAT that added blubber insulation is affecting body temperatures.

        Self sadly included of late....

    • Re:Obvious, to me. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by lobiusmoop ( 305328 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @06:15AM (#59632398) Homepage

      We've also got the whole 'infection' thing under much better control than 150 years ago via improved hygiene, antiseptics, antibiotics and general awareness of germs, so there is much less stress on the human body overall these days.

      • We've also got the whole 'infection' thing under much better control than 150 years ago via improved hygiene, antiseptics, antibiotics and general awareness of germs, so there is much less stress on the human body overall these days.

        OTOH, a lot of people have a chronic low-level inflammation due to the psycho-social stress of modern working life.

        • Re:Obvious, to me. (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Baloroth ( 2370816 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @11:03AM (#59632830)

          You seriously think people today are more stressed out by the modern working life than they were 150 years ago? Is that, honestly, your position? That Facebook, Donald Trump, and sitting in an office 8 hours a day is more stressful than spending 16 hours a day in a factory or working out in a field, and still not knowing if you'll have enough money to buy food today? Food which may or may not even be safe to eat?

          Let's be serious: humans today (on average, in the developed world) have so little to actually stress about, they do things like watch horror movies or go on Twitter to provoke stress reactions. Humans obviously still experience stress, but not because modern life is actually all that stressful, but because humans are wired that way. Humans who never stressed about things died when the tiger they didn't worry about killed them in their sleep. Modern life still has some genuine stresses, of course, but it's so much less than in the past.

          • It's Relative (Score:5, Insightful)

            by kackle ( 910159 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @11:31AM (#59632874)
            Yes but stress is a relative thing. Just watch a child dissolve into tears over a lost toy. He doesn't have to worry about his next meal.

            And the quantity of stressors that come our way daily is significant.
          • I would wager that non-physical, existential threats are actually more stressful on our poor caveman brains and therefore also on the bodies it inhabits, because those things are less clear-cut about what you, as an individual, can do about them. When you're confronted with something like a bad President, for instance, your caveman brain wants to say "Thrud SMASH!", but you can't do that now can you? Ask any teenage boy who is complaining about 'being depressed all the time' what his 'problems' are and once
          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            True, you're more likely to spend 16 hours (including commute) working in a warehouse or hoping to get enough rides in your Uber car or enough food deliveries to pay the rent, little well pay for food which is likely to be junk food that you wonder how healthy it is.

    • I wonder about the impact of taking the measurements in cold rooms versus warm, as air conditioning is much more prevalent now than in the 70s.
      • I am sitting in a heated room right now, you insensitive clod.
      • >"I wonder about the impact of taking the measurements in cold rooms versus warm, as air conditioning is much more prevalent now than in the 70s."

        And one thing I have noticed about air conditioning over my lifetime is that the average so-called "comfort" temperature has been going down and down in buildings. It used to be common to set temps to around 77. Gradually, I have seen it plummet to something like 72! In the summer, I am actually uncomfortably COLD in most buildings and have to carry a jacket

      • Would you say 68 to 72 degrees Fahrenheit is a 'normal' room temperature? Also have you never had a virus in the middle of summer, when you're running the air conditioner? In either case my 'normal' core temperature is still 97.5 to 97.7F.
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      This is not how it works. For Pete's sake, stop modding up bullshit.
      https://www.rush.edu/health-we... [rush.edu]

      • Great you have a magazine article from a medical center to prove how the body works. I think the Op's case is a good one and a claim of bullshit needs more than a doctor or magazine article. It is worth a study or two that actually test a theory.
        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          You don't need a study to prove it, it's not even logical. Take any human who's in/out of shape, and have them train or put on sit on the couch to get the other way. Their body temp doesn't change with fitness...sheesh.

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @11:23AM (#59632864) Homepage Journal

      From the published paper, linked in the OP:

      Although there are many factors that influence resting metabolic rate, change in the population-level of inflammation seems the most plausible explanation for the observed decrease in temperature over time. Economic development, improved standards of living and sanitation, decreased chronic infections from war injuries, improved dental hygiene, the waning of tuberculosis and malaria infections, and the dawn of the antibiotic age together are likely to have decreased chronic inflammation since the 19th century. For example, in the mid-19th century, 2–3% of the population would have been living with active tuberculosis (Tiemersma et al., 2011).

      The data in the paper comes from Americans (starting with civil war veterans up through modern times) and discusses extra weight (obesity) over time. Author's Conclusion: it's not because of obesity.

      • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

        No, but it's very likely secondary to reduced thyroid levels thanks to the markedly increased level of dietary phytoestrogens (mainly soy and flaxseed products).

        Obesity is a co-symptom therefrom, not a cause.

    • I have a rather physical job compared to many people, plus I'm physically training myself anywhere from 7 to 15 hours a week, and my 'normal' core temperature is 97.5 to 97.7 all the time and has been for at least 20 years that I know of. Truth be told it was more like 98.6 for about half my life but at some point it changed, and when I noticed that it bugged the hell out of me.
    • Re:Obvious, to me. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by pz ( 113803 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @01:13PM (#59633070) Journal

      I recently watched the documentary film Apollo 11, based on NASA footage of the mission. What struck me was how FIT everyone appeared to be. Not just the people you would expect to be fit, like the astronauts, but people who were nominally sedentary, like the ground-based staff. There were no portly people. Nowadays, you go into a similar, large governmental installation and everyone is overweight.

      It would not surprise me that the change in body mass over the last 50 years would not also create a change in measured temperature. If nothing else, the change in dissipation rate for a lower surface area to volume ratio would screw up the nominal balance.

      Having now scanned through the published article on eLife (which is not paywalled), the authors do consider weight, but do not find it a factor. The do, interestingly, suggest the alternative that latent infection in the three cohorts they studied would have decreased, and, therefore may have skewed the average values.

    • And body temp is a measure of base metabolism. Pregnant women run a higher basal temp than before getting pregnant. They also burn a shit ton of calories growing a child.

  • by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @05:17AM (#59632306)
    This should disprove global warming.
  • warmer. It just feels that way because our body temperatures are getting lower.
  • I blame Jimmy Carter for this.
  • Rectal vs Oral (Score:2, Interesting)

    I was taught that oral/head was about one degree lower than rectal readings...which would explain the difference since no one uses rectal except for babies.
  • by TooTechy ( 191509 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @09:19AM (#59632638)

    This has been known a long time. We were taught about this years ago.

  • People are so much cooler these days.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Saturday January 18, 2020 @12:26PM (#59632964)
    How is this news? Since Russia converted to Celsius after the October in 1917 revolution, 36.6C was thought of as the nominal resting temperature there. With 37.1C being a mild fever or a sign that you need to check your health.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • They worked hard for that

  • Crikey kids, calm down about units. I think that in the UK we have finally got things about right.

    * Temp: deg C unless you are aged over 80ish in which case you use witches per log or deg F as desired.
    * Time: second
    * Length: metre or foot or inch if the centimetre turns out to be too short by 2.54. Kms are fine for Olympics and other oddities but not on the road thank you, unless the distance is convenient rounded.
    * Area: acre, hectare (discouraged as a bit odd) or nanowales
    * Mass: For people: 1 stone = 1

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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