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Type 1 Diabetes
Drenching night sweat = hypo?
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<blockquote data-quote="Shannon27" data-source="post: 2202633" data-attributes="member: 429571"><p>Hi [USER=147474]@pinewood[/USER] !</p><p>First off, don't trust Google. While it can advise on some things, it will just scare you. If you had cancer, i doubt night time sweats to this level would be your first symptom!</p><p>Sounds like you've been hypo for an extended period of time and luckily rebounded, how are your sugars today? I say extended as hot flushes are a common hypo symptom, but if you're hot for a long time obviously you're going to sweat a lot more. Drink lots of water to rehydrate!</p><p>I find that extended hypos deplete the body of its stash of sugars stored in the liver, hence the rebound. You may want to keep a very close eye on your sugars as they may have a tendency to plummet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shannon27, post: 2202633, member: 429571"] Hi [USER=147474]@pinewood[/USER] ! First off, don't trust Google. While it can advise on some things, it will just scare you. If you had cancer, i doubt night time sweats to this level would be your first symptom! Sounds like you've been hypo for an extended period of time and luckily rebounded, how are your sugars today? I say extended as hot flushes are a common hypo symptom, but if you're hot for a long time obviously you're going to sweat a lot more. Drink lots of water to rehydrate! I find that extended hypos deplete the body of its stash of sugars stored in the liver, hence the rebound. You may want to keep a very close eye on your sugars as they may have a tendency to plummet. [/QUOTE]
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