Interestingness: 1
Paper by Iwao Hirosawa, Susumu Iwamoto, Junko Yoneda, Yasuhiko Wada and Akio Koizumi in the Journal of Anti-Aging Medicine, Volume 2, Issue 2, Summer 1999.
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They measured the temperature of 10 old people that were put into aged care, mostly after having a stroke. They measured many times a day for about a year. In their analysis, they split the people into two groups, the first one, consisting of four people, in which their temperature went up after they entered the care place, and the other of the remaining six, whose temperature didn't go up. Their summary says that maybe the people in the first group were under caloric restriction prior to entering, which got fixed once entering, thus raising their temperature. From the weight numbers, they were probably all borderline CR anyway (40 kg for women, 43 for men, 1.40 and 1.49 metres. Small people). The graphs are not clear to me. It isn't clear either whether the rise in temperature for those four people was a good or bad thing.
There is some further analysis of seasonal changes split across time of day, but I don't understand what it showed
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Abstract follows:
The human diurnal body temperature rhythm does not differ significantly between aged and young subjects; the amplitude and mean level, however, decrease with age. In order to know whether the core body temperature of disabled elderly persons was influenced by environmental factors, we measured the tympanic temperature of nursing home patients. In 4 of 10 tested patients, there was a statistically significant upward shift of the core body temperature within 1 month of admission (P < 0.05). This restoration of body temperature was observed to occur without any relationship to the season of admission. The amplitude of circadian body temperature did not change. There were significant seasonal variations in the diurnal body temperature range between summer and winter, especially between 0900 and 1100 hours in 5 persons with, and without, an upward shift of body temperature. The persons who recovered their body temperatures were thought to have been had lower-than-normal-body temperature for age prior to admission. Body temperature recovery after admission may have been caused by an improvement in energy intake and nutritional balance.
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