AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine the typical changes in surface skin temperature (SST) due to blood redistribution in adolescents and how long it takes for these changes after postural shifts.
  • Healthy volunteers aged 15-18 participated in various positions to measure temperatures from fingers and toes, with results showing a resting temperature and physiological changes within specific ranges depending on body position and ambient temperature.
  • The findings suggest that SST in adolescents can vary about 5 °C due to blood distribution, emphasizing the need to consider individual differences in vasomotor activity during thermoregulation studies.

Article Abstract

Aim: We aimed to establish a normative range of surface skin temperature (SST) changes due to blood redistribution in adolescents and to register the time needed for complete postural change-related blood redistribution.

Methods: The healthy volunteers (age 15-18, n = 500, M 217, F 283) were recruited for this prospective multicenter study. The volunteers were asked to keep one extremity down and another extremity up in supine rest, sitting with straight legs, and upright rest. We obtained temperature readings being taken from the tips of the middle fingers and temperature readings from the tips of the first toes at the ambient temperature of 25 °C and 30 °C. The control group consisted of a 100 of adult volunteers.

Results: The resting temperature of the middle fingers for a sitting participant was 28.6 ± 0.8 °C. The physiological change of this temperature during body position changes was 4.5 ± 1.1 °C and for most of the participants remained within the 26.5-31.5 °C range at 25 °C. For the toe, physiological skin temperature range was 25.5-33 °C. At 30 °C, these ranges were 27-33 °C for the fingers and 27-34 °C for the toes. On average, 2-3 min were needed for such temperature changes.

Conclusion: At normal room temperature, the SST of thermoneutral adolescents may vary within a range of approximately 5 °C only due to the blood redistribution in the body. This range is specific for each person due to individual peculiarities of the vasomotor activity. This normative range of SSTs should be taken into account during investigations of thermoregulation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijamh-2018-0199DOI Listing

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