Slightly, but temperature will be regulated by sweating.
Yes
yes, it does depending how long or short you have the flash for. Your body temperature is always changing.
During your menstrual cycle, an elevated basal body temperature indicates that you have entered your luteal phase. This means that you have ovulated and moved on from the folicular phase. During the first part of your cycle, your body produced estrogen which lowers the basal body temperature. Once ovulation occurs, the body begins to produce progesterone, which causes basal body temperature to rise slowly until your period comes. Throughout your cycle, your temperature should rise and fall, but it is considered an elevation when the temperature rise above a cover line and stays elevated above it.
something to do with the sulphuric acid that is in your body that makes the body temperature rise.
Fever is different from a simple rise in body temperature because a fever always results in a rise in body temperature but such a rise is not always because of a fever. A rise in body temperature could occur because of exercise or warm weather and not just because of a fever.
So many women notice rise in body temperature during the pregnancy. You actually have raised temperature during the pregnancy by half degree Celsius.
rise
what are the signals for a raise in a women's body temperature
273 k
As temperatures rise, the body temperatures of heterotherms also rise. This is in contrast to homeotherms, who have a constant body temperature.
No.
Yes, it rises your body temperature. If you have a fever it will rise it it a lot.