135 points

Higher body temperature is associated with depression, but severe depression will lower it to room temperature.

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60 points
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This is such an odd comment for people to upvote. The human body runs around 37c / 98.6f. A “room temperature” body is literally a corpse.

(Edit: I’ll leave the comment. But yes, I’m a moron.)

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87 points

That’s the joke.

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65 points

And you’ve now taken your first steps into the world of dark humor. Congratulations!

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21 points

User name checks out.

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2 points

If not for your sub thread, I wouldn’t have caught the joke, so thx 🙏

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2 points

Lol, for your edit, and willingness to leave the comment. Have an upvote.

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35 points

Oof.

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7 points

Oh. So, thermodynamically speaking, severe depression can be classified as an abnormally high heat dissipation coefficient. Solution should be easy… Insulation. dusts off hands Physics saves the day again! Somebody tell some techbros and Peter Thiel. I smell a medtech startup!

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7 points

Thays one of them billion dollar ideas, warm blankets to help treat depression.

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6 points

Well, it COULD be a billion dollar idea if you used rrreally cheap materials for the blankets - like, recycled asbestos - and also produced, say, medicine for lung cancer in one of your subsidiaries.

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29 points

I hate articles like this. Implying some sorta of causal relationship with any and all scientific papers that have a correlation between two properties. You can’t write that the paper “suggests” lowering body temps would improve depression when the paper only finds a correlation between the two.

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21 points

People with expensive well worn running shoes have better cardiovascular health. So let’s give people well worn running shoes to improve their health.

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3 points

I like this comparison because it makes me think of a company that is administering a medical trial type program to improve cardiovascular health — I’m imagining a “farm” type place, where undergrads are on treadmills, taking new, expensive running shoes and running in them until they’re “well-worn”. It’s very silly, and I thank you for this mental image.

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6 points

It’s obviously causation. That’s why there are so many depressed people in Hawaii and so few in Alaska.

Wait …

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4 points
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Aah, the mandatory “correlation is not causation” remark ;)

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25 points

I’ve read depression is also linked to chronic low level inflammation, and inflammation causes heat, I wonder if that’s the reason?

Anecdotally I suffer with chronic depression and always seem warm.

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4 points

Most likely, yes. Depression is also correlated with lower immune function, so I’d guess that’s one of the ways it tries to compensate.

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13 points
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So if you go back through records they found that old recordings had a higher body temp. The old explanation was the instruments were off calibration. But a new idea is that body temperatures used to be higher, with the idea that with better hygiene and better food supply our gut microbiome is not as active. I wonder how that all squares with this. Anyway, I hope this current finding is not focused on treating what’s likely a symptom and not the cause.

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