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Thermoregulation (exercise)

Authoring team

Exercise raises the core temperature of the body as heat is produced rapidly by the inefficient burning of energy sources within skeletal muscle - initially, too rapidly for compensatory mechanisms to counter.

However, an elevation of temperature is beneficial in that:

  • it causes pre-capillary sphincters to vasodilate, so:
    • increasing supply of nutrients to muscle
    • increasing removal of waste products from muscle
    • increasing heat loss in cutaneous capillaries and acting to lower core temperature
  • ventilation rate is increased in frequency leading to increased evaporative heat loss
  • the oxygen dissociation curve is shifted to the right, liberating more oxygen to muscles

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