Under the microscope: heat sensitivity

Wed 25 July 2018

Lynn Duffy

While some are basking in the sunshine, for people with MS the summer months can be hard. Over 60% of people with MS say that their symptoms get worse in the heat.

Too hot, too cold: the science behind temperature and MS

Heat and MS expert Associate Professor Davide Filingeri helps us understand what happens inside the body when the temperature changes. How is it possible that hot and cold can both affect multiple sclerosis symptoms? What works for keeping cool?

With symptoms like fatigue, blurred vision and muscle weakness all getting worse with changes in temperature, heat sensitivity can have a massive impact on someone’s life.

But what causes heat sensitivity in MS? And what can researchers do to help?

We put heat sensitivity under the microscope.

How science explains heat sensitivity

Human beings are highly sensitive to changes in body temperature. Even one or two degrees either side of 37°C can cause serious problems. To understand why temperature can have such a dramatic effect, we have to look at the science of the nervous system.

Our nervous system links everything that happens in our body, from how we move, to how we think and feel. To control all this, nerve cells are highly specialised at sending messages smoothly and quickly around the body.

For a message to travel from one end of a cell to the other, it requires an intricate balance of chemicals moving in and out of the nerve fibre. This delicate balance is disrupted by changes in temperature.

Researchers have found in healthy nerves, an increase in temperature of just a few degrees is enough to disrupt the signals sent along the nerve fibre. The reason for this isn’t fully clear, but one suggestion is that the heat affects the amount of sodium that moves in and out of the nerve. As the sodium levels change in the nerve, it becomes harder for a message to be sent.

How does this relate to MS?

Myelin helps messages travel along nerve cells quickly and smoothly. Damaging or losing this myelin, as happens in MS, means that messages slow down, become distorted, or don’t get through at all.

It’s been suggested that in MS, any increase in temperature, coupled with damage to myelin, makes it even harder for the nerve to send messages. So some people with MS find that their symptoms worsen when it gets warmer.

What research is happening to help?

Dr Mark Baker at Queen Mary, University of London is trying to understand more about what changes in nerve cells when the temperature goes up.

> Read more about Mark Baker's heat sensitivity research