Thermoregulation: Temperature Control by the Skin
Introduction
The skin is the body's primary thermoregulatory organ, responsible for maintaining core temperature within a narrow range (36.5-37.5°C) despite wide environmental fluctuations. This is achieved through a sophisticated interplay of cutaneous blood flow, eccrine sweating, and behavioral responses.
Understanding cutaneous thermoregulation is clinically relevant for conditions ranging from hyperhidrosis to erythromelalgia, and for understanding the physiological basis of thermal injury.
Overview of Thermoregulation
Heat Balance Equation
The body maintains thermal equilibrium when:
Heat Production = Heat Loss
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Heat Loss Mechanisms
| Mechanism | Contribution | Physical Basis | Skin's Role |
|---|
| Radiation | 40% at rest | Infrared emission | Vasodilation ↑ surface temperature |
| Convection | 30% at rest | Heat transfer to moving air/water | Vasodilation, exposed surface area |
| Evaporation | 25% at rest; >90% during exercise | Latent heat of vaporization | Eccrine sweating |
| Conduction | 5% at rest | Direct contact heat transfer | Minimal (unless in water) |
Cutaneous Blood Flow
Vascular Anatomy for Thermoregulation
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Arteriovenous Anastomoses (AVAs)
AVAs are direct connections between arterioles and venules that bypass capillary beds, located primarily in acral skin.
| Feature | Description |
|---|
| Location | Fingertips, palms, soles, ears, nose, lips |
| Structure | Thick-walled, muscular, highly innervated |
| Diameter | 20-75 μm (vs ~8 μm for capillaries) |
| Innervation | Dense sympathetic (vasoconstrictor) |
| Flow capacity | Up to 100× capillary flow when dilated |
| Function | Rapid heat dissipation or retention |
Regulation of Cutaneous Blood Flow
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Cutaneous Blood Flow Range
| State | Blood Flow | % Cardiac Output |
|---|
| Thermoneutral | ~300 mL/min | 5% |
| Maximum vasoconstriction | ~50 mL/min | <1% |
| Maximum vasodilation | ~7-8 L/min | Up to 60% (heat stress) |
Eccrine Sweating
Eccrine Gland Physiology
Eccrine sweat glands are the primary effector organs for evaporative heat loss.
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Sweat Gland Distribution and Capacity
| Body Region | Density (/cm²) | Capacity |
|---|
| Palms/soles | 300-600 | Low thermal response (emotional) |
| Forehead | 170-360 | High thermal response |
| Chest/back | 100-150 | Moderate |
| Limbs | 50-100 | Moderate |
| Total number | 2-4 million | — |
| Maximum output | 2-4 L/hour | — |
| Daily maximum | 10-14 L | — |
Sweat Composition
| Component | Concentration | Notes |
|---|
| Water | 99% | Primary component |
| Sodium | 10-70 mEq/L | ↑ with sweat rate; ↓ with acclimatization |
| Chloride | 10-60 mEq/L | Diagnostic in CF (>60 mEq/L) |
| Potassium | 3-10 mEq/L | Relatively stable |
| Urea | Variable | Waste excretion |
| Lactate | Variable | Increases with exercise |
| Antimicrobial peptides | Low | Dermcidin, LL-37 |
Cold Response Mechanisms
Vasoconstriction and Piloerection
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Cold-Induced Vasodilation (CIVD)
During prolonged cold exposure, paradoxical vasodilation occurs (Lewis reaction) to prevent tissue injury:
| Feature | Description |
|---|
| Timing | Occurs after 5-10 minutes of cold |
| Pattern | Cyclic: vasoconstriction → vasodilation → vasoconstriction |
| Function | Protects against frostbite |
| Mechanism | Axon reflex, local mediators |
| Clinical | Absent or reduced in Raynaud's phenomenon |
Disorders of Thermoregulation
Hyperhidrosis
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| Type | Distribution | Cause | Treatment |
|---|
| Primary focal | Axillary, palmar, plantar | Unknown (? genetic) | Antiperspirants, botulinum toxin, sympathectomy |
| Secondary generalized | Diffuse | Systemic disease, medications | Treat underlying cause |
| Gustatory | Face | Nerve damage, surgery | Topical anticholinergics |
Anhidrosis
| Cause | Mechanism | Examples |
|---|
| Congenital | Eccrine gland absence | Hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia |
| Acquired local | Gland destruction | Burns, radiation, scleroderma |
| Neurogenic | Nerve damage | Diabetic neuropathy, Ross syndrome |
| Drug-induced | Anticholinergics | Antihistamines, antipsychotics |
Temperature-Related Disorders
| Condition | Temperature | Pathophysiology | Skin Findings |
|---|
| Heat rash (miliaria) | High | Sweat duct obstruction | Papules, vesicles |
| Heat stroke | >40°C core | Thermoregulatory failure | Hot, dry skin (or wet) |
| Frostbite | <0°C local | Ice crystal formation | White, numb → blisters |
| Erythromelalgia | High | Microvascular dysfunction | Red, painful, hot extremities |
| Raynaud's | Cold-triggered | Vasospasm | White → blue → red digits |
Integration of Thermoregulation
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Key Clinical Pearls
| Topic | Pearl |
|---|
| AVAs | Located in acral skin; primary heat-exchange structures |
| Blood flow range | 50 mL/min (cold) to 8 L/min (heat stress) |
| Sweat rate | Up to 2-4 L/hour; can lose 10+ L/day |
| Acclimatization | ↓ Sweat Na+ concentration; ↑ sweat volume |
| Hyperhidrosis | Primary focal is most common; consider botox if topicals fail |
| Frostbite | Rapid rewarming after rescue; no rewarming if refreezing possible |