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Doctors’ Answers to “Frequently Asked Questions” – Night Sweats

These comments are made for the purpose of discussion and should NOT be used as recommendations for or against therapies or other treatments. An individual patient is always advised to consult their own physician.

[posted 11/12/1999]

Question: I have been experiencing night sweats for the past 2 months. I have tested negative for T.B. and diabetes. The only thing that my doctor can tell me is that it is the 15mg dose of Paxil that is causing the night sweats. My question is: how can the Paxil just now be causing me night sweats after taking it for 5 years, and never having experienced them before? Is there something else that might be the cause? I am very skeptical about discontinuing Paxil, and trying another anti- depressant. Thank you

Answer: There are many more things other than TB that would do this. Get a chem 20 a sedimentation rate and a CBC. Also, cut or stop the Paxil to see if it goes away. I doubt it strongly and your logic is correct. But, stopping it for a week or ten days would answer the problem. Also, give your doctor pause for thought to continue to evaluate the underlying problem which he/she has quit on.

Night Sweats

Question: My mother has suffered with night sweats for quite a few months now. She is 76

years old, is through the “change”, has just had a successful breast removal and is

on tamoxifen. She is also on Synthroid and is having other problems

with that recently. But the sweats don’t seem to have anything to do with the other

problems and doctors can’t tell her what’s wrong. She had shingles quite a while ago

and it still acts up. Could the night sweats be associated with the shingles?

Answer: Night sweats can be seen in several diseases. Classically, tuberculosis presents this

way, but other diseases like lymphoma and other cancers, and other infections can present

this way. If she has had a complete physical and chest x-ray (probably with her cancer) and

normal labs (including sedimentation rate or C reactive protein) it probably represents nothing

serious. Occasional women on tamoxifen will experience symptoms similar to menopause.

This can often be blocked with small doses of clonidine. If this abolished the problem, I’d be

fairly comfortable that that’s the cause.