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While its true your body burns additional calories to stay warm you have to significantly decrease your body core temp over a long period of time. Were talking days on end. I sometimes experience mild Hypothermia during an extended search and rescue if I get wet and cold.
Normal body temp 98.6 deg F = 37 C - 98 deg F = 36.67 .
97 deg F = 36.11 C you shiver allot you're body starts to shunt blood from extremities this is when things start getting uncomfortable tolerable by most but you can develop Atrial fibrillation potentially life threatening
96 deg F = 35.56 C this point if you haven't already you shiver so violently and you will vomit, and loose bowel and bladder control, Shock has set in, this means you're body is shutting down. Your brain doesn't process info correctly, you make poor decisions at this point. Muscles become weak and stiff and you experience extreme pain. you might stop shivering perhaps even feel warm this is a very, very, bad sign. In fact, we sometimes find hypothermia victims without clothing and suspect a sexual assault that never took place.
95 deg F = 35 C at this point you are clinically Hypothermic you no longer feel warm or shiver your body rappidly shuts down and the result is DEATH.
Long term results from repeated hypothermia include nerve damage, circulation issues, and Chronic Atrial fibrillation. Last thing we need on out DOT physical.
the undesired short term and potential long term effects don't justify the results.
Loo, Just get out and walk around for ten or fifteen minutes a day and the weight will come off.
Bob Wolf