EU Staying warm: What does an unheated room do to your body? - Europeans prepare to die this winter


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By James Gallagher
Inside Health presenter, BBC Radio 4

Mention deadly cold and I think of polar explorers with icicles dangling from their beards and mountaineers tackling the heights of Everest; of fingers turning black with frostbite and the chilling clutch of hypothermia.

So I was sceptical when I was asked to take part in a cold experiment that took place at just 10 degrees Celsius. Yes, 10C.

To me that's mild, nowhere near freezing and certainly no Arctic blast. Surely we'd have to go much colder before putting a strain on the body? I was wrong.

"It sounds mild, but it is a real physiological challenge," Prof Damian Bailey, from the University of South Wales, tells me.

He's invited me to his laboratory to explore the impact of cold homes on our bodies and why such seemingly mild temperatures can become deadly.

"Ten degrees is the average temperature that people will be living in, if they can't afford to heat their homes," said Prof Bailey.

And as I was about to find out, 10C has a profound impact on the heart, lungs and brain.

I'm led into the environmental chamber in the corner of the laboratory - it's all shiny metal walls and thick, heavy doors. In this air-tight room, scientists can precisely set the temperature, humidity and oxygen levels.

I'm hit with a blast of warm 21C air. The plan is to start at 21C, drop the temperature down to 10C and chart how my body responds to the chill.

First, I am wired up to countless state-of-the-art gizmos for the most in-depth analysis my body has ever faced.

My chest, arms and legs are dotted with monitors to track my body temperature, heart rate and blood pressure.

"You will look like something out of Star Wars," says Prof Bailey as another sensor and trailing cable is attached to my body.

A headset is fitted to monitor the blood flow in my brain just as the first beads of sweat breakout on my brow; an ultrasound inspects the carotid arteries in my neck (hearing the rhythmic whoosh of blood going to my brain is oddly reassuring) and I breathe into a huge tube that analyses the air I exhale.

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The outfit was not a choice - the scientists needed direct access to the skin to conduct the experiment

The measurements are done. The scientists know how my body performs in a pleasant 21C. So the fans kick in and a cool breeze gradually lowers the temperature in the chamber.

"Your brain is tasting your blood as we speak and it's tasting the temperature and the brain is now sending signals to the rest of your body," Prof Bailey tells me.

The goal is to keep my core - that's my major organs including my heart and liver - at around 37C.

I was still unaware of the profound changes happening inside my body, but there were already clues on the outside.

By the time the room has dropped to 18C I was no longer sweating and the hairs on my arms were starting to stand up to help insulate my body.

"Science tells us that 18 degrees is the tipping point... the body is now working to defend that core temperature," Prof Bailey shouts over the droning fans.

Next my fingers turn white and they feel cold. The blood vessels in my hands are being closed off - known as vasoconstriction - in order to keep my warm blood for my critical organs.

This would happen even more quickly if I were a different gender.

"Women do tend to feel the cold more, because of hormones (oestrogen) their blood vessels in their hands and feet are more likely to constrict... and that makes us feel cold," says Dr Clare Eglin from the University of Portsmouth.

My first shiver kicks in at 11.5C as my muscles begin to shake to generate heat.

At 10C the fans shut down. I'm feeling uncomfortable, but not freezing as we repeated all the bodily measurements again at the lower temperature and it soon became clear I was wrong to doubt that 10C would affect me.

"The body is working jolly hard at 10 degrees," says Prof Bailey.

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What shocks me is the change in blood flow to the brain and how much longer it takes me to complete a shape-sorting game.

I wouldn't want to be trying to do school homework in a cold room or to have this compound something like dementia.

"You're delivering less blood to the brain, so there's less oxygen and less glucose [sugar] getting into the brain and the downside of that is it's having a negative impact on your mental gymnastics," Prof Bailey says.

But my body is achieving its main goal of keeping my core body temperature stable - it's just having to do more work.

I'm pumping warm blood around my body more intensely with my heart beating faster and blood pressure also shooting up.

"That increasing blood pressure is a risk factor for a stroke, it's a risk factor for a heart attack," Prof Bailey tells me.

The blood itself is also changing "so it becomes a bit like treacle", says Prof Bailey, and this thicker gloopier blood also adds to the risk of a dangerous blockage.

It's why heart attacks and strokes are more common in the winter.

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Prof Damian Bailey says "the evidence clearly suggests that cold is more deadly than the heat"

Fortunately, I started off with "fabulous vasculature", Prof Bailey tells me, but these internal changes are a risk to those who already have poor heart health and the elderly.

"The evidence clearly suggests that cold is more deadly than the heat, there are a higher number of deaths caused through cold snaps than there are through the heat snaps," says Prof Bailey.

"So I really do think that more recognition needs to be paid for the dangers associated with cold."

Cold favours viruses too​

The cold also lends a helping hand to many infections that thrive in the winter months such as flu. Pneumonia, when there is inflammation in the lungs because of an infection, is more common after cold weather.

It is easier for viruses to spread because we're more likely to meet up indoors with the windows shut and no fresh air to blow viruses away.

Cold also makes it easier for viruses to survive outside the body and cold air contains less virus-trapping moisture.

Dry air allows viruses to travel further distances, says Prof Akiko Iwasaki, an immunobiologist from Yale University. She has also performed experiments showing breathing in cold air affects how the immune system works in the nose.

Prof Iwasaki tells me: "At these cooler temperatures, your immune response becomes less active and this can allow virus to grow better within your nose."

What can you actually do about it?​

In an ideal world we'd all heat the room we're in to at least 18C. When that is not possible, Prof Bailey says "it's like preparing for a mountaineering expedition".

His tips are:
  • focus on clothes that provide good insulation such as those made of wool
  • gloves and warm socks are more important than a hat (but a woolly hat will help too)
  • switch foods to a higher carbohydrate diet
  • generate more body heat by moving around and not just sitting in a chair and watching TV.
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As the weather gets colder, Matt Taylor and Colletta Smith share money-saving tips.
 
Reminder that even cavemen who thought their own shit was edible still had enough common sense to go chop down a tree and burn it for warmth rather than freeze to death.

This story really is a whombo combo of hilarity and stupidity because holy fucking shit it doesn't have to be this way you witless fucking retards, a scowling Scandinavian teenager should not be all it takes for you dipshits to accept literally freezing to death because Greta flew in on a private jet to lecture you on climate change.
 
Reminder that even cavemen who thought their own shit was edible still had enough common sense to go chop down a tree and burn it for warmth rather than freeze to death.

This story really is a whombo combo of hilarity and stupidity because holy fucking shit it doesn't have to be this way you witless fucking retards, a scowling Scandinavian teenager should not be all it takes for you dipshits to accept literally freezing to death because Greta flew in on a private jet to lecture you on climate change.
It’s natural selection at work.
 
As I read this I look at the thermometer on my desk. It's 55.8 real degrees (27% humidity). It's uncomfortable, so I wear a bathrobe and gloves around the house. I choose to live this way because I'm not a faggot, not a woman, but I'm cheap as fuck.

The author sits like a homosexual.
 
retard alert
Go Lick Slav nutsack.

Russia did the exact thing in 2008 with Georgia that they are doing now and the same people who are now sending Billions to the Ukes every other week gave exactly zero fucks and the Eurocucks continued to buy endless amounts of Russian energy instead of developing their own energy reserves.

Oh who was in charge in 2008 again? Oh the same people in charge now? The People who literally said "The 80s called, they want their foreign policy back" when people pointed out that Putin is kind of a giant retard who will invade other countries.

Man it's funny how The Elites suddenly give a shit about Russia when their money laundering operation is is danger.
 
I thought this article was quite interesting.

It also makes me feel for people in Europe who live in dense areas without any other options for heating.

Anyway.

"Women do tend to feel the cold more, because of hormones (oestrogen) their blood vessels in their hands and feet are more likely to constrict... and that makes us feel cold," says Dr Clare Eglin from the University of Portsmouth.

A thousand twitter troons just started their lamentations about how they are uniquely effected by natural gas prices.
 
The outfit was not a choice - the scientists needed direct access to the skin to conduct the experiment
The outfit negates the entire fucking experiment. Huge shock that if you wear shorts and a thin shirt in 50 degrees you are going to be cold.
"Your brain is tasting your blood as we speak and it's tasting the temperature and the brain is now sending signals to the rest of your body," Prof Bailey tells me.
This was a typo right? The scientist actually said, "Your brain is testing your blood" not tasting. Tasting would be retarded.
Science tells us that 18 degrees is the tipping point...
Oh that phrase science tells us makes me immediately suspicious of that person.

Look everyone should know that cold is bad. Some people tolerate it better than others but honestly at 50F if they had given that guy a hoodie he would have been fine.

She has also performed experiments showing breathing in cold air affects how the immune system works in the nose.
Why are you not linking us to those experiments?

Honestly I feel like scientists are spending a lot of time revisiting things that have been established not just by experimentation but by thousands of years of examples.

We started wearing clothing because being cold is not good for us. We started killing animals and cooking their flesh because insects were not sufficient to help us thrive. We started killing ostracizing quacks because they were poisoning society with tonics and snake oil.

Now we have cold bad durhur, eat the bugs, and take the shot because muh science says.
:mad:
 
Thank God we have academics who've studied for decades to inform us of these things.

Its just a little nugget you'll store in your brain, some mental-lube to help it slide on in one day when they tell you that heat-deaths have only really happened in the last 50ish years and that is totally due to white people driving suvs, and not people being fat, people have been fat forever.
 
*laughs in South American*

Reminder that even cavemen who thought their own shit was edible still had enough common sense to go chop down a tree and burn it for warmth rather than freeze to death.
Come on, we're talking about Europe here. I'm sure they would need a LOICENSE and a special tax to even pick up some twigs from the park.
 
Go Lick Slav nutsack.

Russia did the exact thing in 2008 with Georgia that they are doing now and the same people who are now sending Billions to the Ukes every other week gave exactly zero fucks and the Eurocucks continued to buy endless amounts of Russian energy instead of developing their own energy reserves.

Oh who was in charge in 2008 again? Oh the same people in charge now? The People who literally said "The 80s called, they want their foreign policy back" when people pointed out that Putin is kind of a giant retard who will invade other countries.

Man it's funny how The Elites suddenly give a shit about Russia when their money laundering operation is is danger.
Turn off CNN and take your meds. There's no reason to be upset.
 
*laughs in South American*


Come on, we're talking about Europe here. I'm sure they would need a LOICENSE and a special tax to even pick up some twigs from the park.
The funny thing is this was literally the case in the norman feudal system. You'd have to pay a fee to the manor lord to collect fallen branches and such from the woods for heating and cooking

So its a very british tradition
 
The funny thing is this was literally the case in the norman feudal system. You'd have to pay a fee to the manor lord to collect fallen branches and such from the woods for heating and cooking

So its a very british tradition
Well, we are currently living (or they are trying that we do) in feudalism, with the difference that is managed by commies who have no idea how to govern anything.
 
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