Unless you have some research here Billy, I suggest you hold off on this conclusion and especially your hypothesis as to the reason.
I am not a researcher, just passing on what I have heard form medical specialists.
There were two studies (and maybe a couple more I didn't see) that showed getting one's feet cold resulted in more colds. Both studies had small numbers of test subjects. At least one researcher hypothesized, (based on some other study showing that during respiratory virus outbreaks there were a fair number of asymptomatic infections), that the infections were asymptomatic and the cold feet caused them to become symptomatic.
That would seem to support that view.
But those studies are contradicted by a large number of studies that showed exposure to inclement weather and/or cold temperatures had no effect on one's immune system (excluding frostbite of course) or on the number or length of colds one experiences.
I didn't say it affected the immune system, only that the viruses replicate better at lower temperatures and hence would have a greater chance of taking hold in the body if the body was harbouring the virus and if the body temperature dropped.
As to your hypothesis lower body temperature is more conducive to viral replication, show me the evidence.
It is not my hypothesis. It is what I have been told and what googling seemed to support at the time. I don't know if I have enough time to google it extensively again and argue the reults but here is one quickly:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=1965095&dopt=Abstract
...hyperthermia...of 41 C acts as an inhibitory agent on HSV-1 and VSV virus replication in Vero cells.
About the only thing that is well documented is that cold temperature makes your nose run.
It makes your nose, ears, hands and feet cold. It makes you shiver and get "goosebumps". It makes susceptible individuals cough or wheeze. If sufficiently cold it can cause gangrene and even death.
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