According to a study, published in the Journal of Physiology, the changes in body temperature can cause you a sudden death.
The body temperature may lead you to cardiac arrhythmia or irregular heartbeat.
The researchers also said that the
footballers who drops dead in the middle of a game or the infant who
dies during sleep is often a victim of arrhythmia.
Sudden cardiac death has several causes,
including inheritable mutations in our DNA affecting structure and
function of proteins in the heart.
Professor Peter Ruben from the Simon
Fraser University in Canada found when studying the proteins that
underlie electrical signalling in the heart, and subjecting those
proteins to conditions that are similar to the stress of exercise, in
some cases, temperature can cause changes that trigger arrhythmia.
According to Ruben, when muscle cells in
our hearts contract rhythmically and in a well-coordinated way, the
heart efficiently pumps blood throughout our bodies.
When the rhythmic pumping action is disrupted by an arrhythmia, our hearts can no longer distribute blood.
In extreme cases, this leads to sudden cardiac death.
“The electrical signal behind muscle
contraction is produced by tiny protein molecules in the membrane of our
heart cells. Temperature fluctuations modify the way all proteins
behave, but some DNA mutations can make proteins especially sensitive to
changes in temperature,” he said.
Ruben’s team found a protein that is far
more sensitive to temperature than normal. When normal body temperature
goes up for example, during exercise, or goes down during sleep, the
affected protein no longer functions normally.
The disrupted protein function causes the
electrical signal in our heart to become erratic, triggering an
arrhythmia and, potentially, sudden cardiac death.
The DNA mutation that creates more
temperature-sensitive proteins is very rare, but it can produce deadly
results when combined with another arrhythmia trigger, such as changes
in the acid content of our blood that occur normally as a by-product of
exercise and sleep, particularly sleep apnea.
“For many years, we have studied sodium channels, the proteins in our hearts that produce electrical signals,” said Ruben.
“An earlier study of ours found that
temperature changes are a trigger for some seizure disorders. We
imagined that cardiac arrhythmias are like seizures and wondered whether
they might share the same triggers,” he said.
Ruben notes that with this new knowledge,
people can examine their family histories and, if sudden cardiac death
is part of that family history, or if they suffer from unexplained
fainting, they can seek medical advice.
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