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Vasoconstriction, vasodilation, shivering and sweating

Vasoconstriction is a response to being too cold. The process involves the narrowing of blood vessels at the skin surface to reduce heat loss through the surface of the skin.

Diagram of an arteriole with shunt vessel labelled. Nerve impulses come from the hypothalmus and the arteriole becomes constricted whilst the shunt vessel dilates. Little heat is lost.

Vasodilation is a response to being too hot. The process includes the widening of blood vessels at the skin surface to increase heat loss through the surface of the skin.

Diagram of an arteriole with shunt vessel labelled. Nerve impulses come from the hypothalmus and the arteriole becomes dilated whilst the shunt vessel narrows. A lot of heat is lost.

This table summarises the two processes.

Too coldToo hot
ProcessVasoconstrictionVasodilation
ArteriolesGet narrowerGet wider
Blood flow in skin capillariesDecreasesIncreases
Heat loss from skinDecreasesIncreases
Process
Too coldVasoconstriction
Too hotVasodilation
Arterioles
Too coldGet narrower
Too hotGet wider
Blood flow in skin capillaries
Too coldDecreases
Too hotIncreases
Heat loss from skin
Too coldDecreases
Too hotIncreases

When you are cold you may start shivering. Shivering is caused by involuntary contractions of your muscles. Muscle contractions require energy from which releases heat. This heat is used to warm the body up.

When you are too hot you will sweat. Sweat is produced by the sweat glands and travels up the sweat duct and out of the sweat pore onto the skin surface. Here it will evaporate, taking excess body heat with it. Your body uses this mechanism to cool down.

Diagram showing hairs lying flat so heat can escape. Sweat is secreted by sweat glands which cools the skin by evaporation. Blood flow in capillaries also increases.