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TEMPERATURE OF THE SKIN

JAMA. 1929;92(10):809-810. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700360047014.
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There are few measurements of bodily phenomena to which the physician has occasion to refer more frequently than the measurement of the temperature. Its relative constancy during health serves as a sign of well being, and divergences from the "normal" range are invariably looked on as indicative of disease or at least of some serious physiologic upset. Small differences in the temperature of the body are recorded when the examinations are made by rectum, by vagina or in the stream of urine as contrasted with oral readings. At most, the real temperature of the internal structures may exceed the record by mouth to the extent of about one degree Fahrenheit, and the diurnal variations in a given individual do not exceed three degrees.

The surface of the body is the seat of the elimination of heat, a function of major importance to a heat-producing organism that attempts to maintain a

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