Ondochousetsu (Temperature Control) - Pekoms

Nathan

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The normal body temperature (which varies between 36°C and 37°C, or 96°F and 98,6°F) is a very important aspect of the body, because when the temperature is other then normal, the organism can't work properly (the more it deviates from the normal values, the more the metabolism gets hindered). Normal temperature is needed for all enzymes to work properly and all proteins to exist in their normal state (non denatured, denaturing is a process where the structure of a protein gets irreversibly destroyed and the protein becomes unusable).

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Homework:

Questions (Answer these after reading the article):

-Which part of the body initiates the increased tempreature, and how does it happen (On the cellular level)?
-Why do we get fevers?
-Why do we feel chills after getting a fever?
-Difference of a Bacterial and Viral induced fever?
-Difference between 'Hypothermia' and 'Hyperthermia'




There are many factors that can disrupt the human bodies temperature; environmental exposition, internal processes (infection, reaction to a poison, etc) or maybe chakra dis-balance. Even extreme physical exertion can destroy enough muscle to trigger an inflamatory rection that will trigger fever. There are various ways to regulate body temperature based on it being high or low, the cause and how far it has risen or dropped. In this skill, you'll learn a few techniques that serve to lower or raise the body temperature. However, this effect is temporary. You'll need to tackle the condition that triggered the change in body temperature and, when that takes time, you'll need to add medicine to help keep the temperature controlled.


Basically, there are two ways this can go: your body temperature will either be too hgih or too low:


Hypothermia occurs mainly due to environmental influences (i.e. when someone isn't dressed appropriately, when someone falls into cold water, gets buried in by snow etc.), internally it can mean damage to the TRC (look below for what that is) or it can also be caused by overuse of the temperature lowering techniques I posted below; and that is why I made that chart, and that is why you have to learn the values .
To counter hypothermia itself you can proceed in 2 ways; one would be using fire chakra (to heat the patients body, not to burn it!! be careful) or to use this tech:

(Iryō Ninjutsu: Rinkai Roppou) Medical Technique: Temperature rise
Type: Supplementary
Rank: B-Rank
Range: Short
Chakra: 20
Damage: N/A
Description: The user will place both of his hands on the patients body, and insert a fair amount of his chakra into the patient. He or she will then will/make the chakra affect the heart (fastening the heart rate), the blood vessels (constricting them rising the blood pressure) and the thyroid gland (inducing faster release of hormones that enhance the metabolism). As result the body temperature will rise to 37°C (or 98,6°F).
Note: user must be a master of Diagnosis

Sub-febrile temperature is, in most cases, just a symptom of a rising infection/upcoming illness. It is important to not lower this temperature because it actually helps the body fight the disease! The rise in temperature is caused by the body in a complicated way, but I will try to simplify it a bit in a few steps:
1. An infection or a strange substance triggers the detection/production of an antigen (as viruses, bacteria, poisons etc.).
2. The antibodies react to the presence of that antigen by attacking it, but first they release mediators. Mediators (histamine for example) are chemical substances that notify the entire organism of the presence of an antigen.
3. Mediators reach the center of thermal regulation (which is located in the hypothalamus) and signal that an antigen was detected.
4. As a result, the TRC (thermoregulation center) rises up the temperature by more or less 0,5°C (that is about 0,9°F) by sending off hormones that tell the pituitary gland to release the TSH hormone which controls the thyroid gland, which in turn releases T3 and T4 hormones which enhance/speed up the overall metabolism of the person, which, in turn, is what is really needed to achieve the rise in temperature. Temperature rises by increasing blood flow, metabolic functions and by burning calories. Shivers, for example, are a way for the body to use the muscles to burn calories through involuntary movements which in turn produces heat.
5. The slight rise in temperatures activates more and more antibodies and enhances their performance as well as further increasing blood glow and circulation which then further increases the response of the organism.

Febrile temperature
comes in place when the previously mentioned antigen continues to be produced as a result of a resulting infection, so more and more antibodies get released which in turn release more and more mediators, which then make the TRC go berserk and it totally looses its sense of normal temperature. When this happens, the temperature isn't optimal for enzymes and antibodies in general anymore, and they loose their effectiveness, therefore the effect of sub-febrile temperature is negated, and the state is useless or more often dangerous because at a point the antibody stop working altogether. This is when you need to start lowering the temperature, and you do this by using this technique:

(Iryō Ninjutsu: Rinkai Umou Seppan) Medical Technique: Gentle Temperature Ease
Type: Supplementary
Rank: B-Rank
Range: Short
Chakra: 20
Damage: N/A
Description: In order for this jutsu to take effect, the user must somehow have contact with the earth; be it actual ground or a mere pot filled with earth. The user places his dominant hand on the patients chest, and the other hand on the ground/earth. By activating this technique the user takes excessive temperature from the patient, guides it through his body and releases it into the earth through his other hand. This relieves the temperature of the patient by 0,8°C (or 1,4°F) per use until the patient's temperature is 36ºC.
Note: If unable to guide the chakra into the ground/pot of earth, then the users temperature rises for the mentioned amount

(Iryō Ninjutsu: Rinkai Umou Mattou) Medical Technique: Complete Temperature Ease
Type: Supplementary
Rank: A-Rank
Chakra: 30
Damage: N/A
Range: Short
Description: In order for this jutsu to take effect, the user must somehow have contact with the earth; be it actual ground or a mere pot filled with earth. The user places his dominant hand on the patients chest, and the other hand on the ground/earth. By activating this technique the user takes excessive temperature from the patient, guides it through his body and releases it into the earth through his other hand. This relieves the temperature of the patient by 1,6°C (or ~3°F).
Note: If unable to guide the chakra into the ground/pot of earth, then the users temperature rises for the mentioned amount


Make sure you don't lower the temperature too much (below sub-febrile) because you want that effect it gives, but then again you need to lower it enough to not be dangerous anymore. You'll perfect this with practice .

Very high febrility is when it becomes lethal. The temperature is now higher then the protein structure can stand, and they begin to disintegrate, denature and become useless, this means actually tissue is dying off! And of course, the most effected by this is the brain. At this moment don't think about getting to the optimal temperature, lower it by any means necessary; be it water jutsu (of low rank, you don't want to hurt the patient) or even ice jutsu. Of course you can not use a jutsu and got for the old fashioned way of putting him/her in a bathtub full of ice cubes. Your main goal is to save life here!​

This has some cientifical knowledge here but the main aspects to rettain for NB RPG are these:

-All large wounds and trauma will always induce fever due to either the inflamatory reaction to the tissue destuction or the infection caused by large open wounds.

-Toxins, Venoms and Poisons will always rise the body temperature before dropping it abruptly unless its defined in the toxin, venom or poison description as otherwise.

-Blood loss will always lower your body temperature and bring about a state of hypothermia, severe or not.

-Chakra depletion will lower your body temperature.
 

Pekoms

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1. Which part of the body initiates the increased tempreature, and how does it happen (On the cellular level)?

The hypothalamus is commonly associated with maintaining homeostatic systems, including temperature regulation. Pyrogen functions as the main impetus for fever. It induces a release of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), and in turn acts on the hypothalamus to cause heat-creating effects to match a new temperature level.​

2. Why do we get fevers?

Homeostasis must be consistently maintained or else the body will soon therafter die. Since homeostasis includes body temperature regulation, a certain normalized temperature is needed for certain enzymes to exist, so a fever is way for the body to react by increasing temperature and causing enzymes to denature. It is, more or less, a defense mechanism, a reaction the body gives to an external threat​

3. Why do we feel chills after getting a fever?

In keeping with the main function of the hypothalamus, that particular region of the forebrain is essentially akin to a thermostat. The body's temperature increases through both active generation and retention of heat, which means the body retains heat through vasoconstriction, which is the constriction of blood vessels. This reduces heat lost through the skin and as such, makes the person feel cold. If these measures are insufficient to make the blood temperature in the brain match the new set point in the hypothalamus, then shivering begins in order to use muscle movements to produce more heat.​

4. Difference of a Bacterial and Viral induced fever?

Between the two types, bacterial fevers are more common and can happen to anybody given that bacteria are single-cell organisms that thrive in a wide variety of environments. On the other hand, a viral fever requires a living host in order to multiply, and is thus less frequently induced.​

5. Difference between 'Hypothermia' and 'Hyperthermia'?

The former occurs when the body has lost heat and is below the optimal level of heat required for homeostasis, ergo it needs to heat itself up by shivering or vasodilation. Contrarily, the latter occurs when the body has retained too much heat, and needs to get rid of the excess heat through sweating and vasoconstriction.​
 
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