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Decreased sweating and increased body temperature, especially in hot weather.
This drug may increase the risk for heatstroke because it causes decreased sweating.
Clidinium increases the risk of heat stroke because it causes decreased sweating.
Children may be more sensitive to the side effects of this drug, especially weakened bones, slowed growth rate, and decreased sweating.
In hot weather, fever and heatstroke may occur due to decreased sweating.
Dicyclomine can cause decreased sweating, which can lead to heat stroke in a hot environment.
Check carefully for signs of decreased sweating.
Dry mouth, drowsiness, dizziness, decreased sweating, and constipation may also occur.
This drug can cause decreased sweating, which could cause a severe rise in your body temperature (hyperthermia).
This medication can cause decreased sweating.
Heat prostration (due to decreased sweating) can occur when anticholinergics such as Enablex are used in a hot environment.
Trihexyphenidyl may cause decreased sweating.
Topiramate can infrequently cause decreased sweating, which could raise your body temperature to unsafe levels (hyperthermia).
Decreased sweating.
Try to keep as cool as possible and watch for signs of heat stroke such as decreased sweating, nausea, and dizziness.
Chlorpheniramine, methscopolamine, and pseudoephedrine increases the risk of heat stroke because it causes decreased sweating and can make you more sensitive to sunlight.
Blurred vision, widened pupils, headache, constipation, dry mouth/nose/throat, decreased sweating, dizziness, and drowsiness may occur.
One's heart and respiration rates begin to increase to compensate for decreased plasma volume and blood pressure, while body temperature may rise because of decreased sweating.
Dizziness, drowsiness, blurred vision, dry mouth, vision problems, headache, trouble sleeping, constipation, flushing, dry skin, and decreased sweating may occur.
These associations reflect the specific changes of warm, dry skin from decreased sweating, blurry vision, decreased sweating/lacrimation, vasodilation, and central nervous system effects on muscarinic receptors, type 4 and 5.
Tumor, mass, or lymph node in the upper chest or lymph node causing pressure on a nerve may cause decreased sweating, a small pupil, or drooping eyelid all on the affected side (Horner syndrome)
Tell your doctor immediately if any of these unlikely but serious side effects occur: decreased sweating, dry/hot/flushed skin, fast/irregular heartbeat, mental/mood changes (such as confusion, hallucinations, agitation, nervousness, unusual excitement), eye pain, vision changes, difficulty urinating, decreased sexual ability.
The skin becomes warm partly from decreased sweating and partly from compensatory cutaneous vasodilatation, (also causing red skin discolouration) as the body attempts to shunt a higher proportion of core-temperature blood as close as possible to the surface of the skin.
Some products that may interact with this drug include: carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (such as acetazolamide, methazolamide), valproic acid, other drugs that cause decreased sweating (including anticholinergics such as belladonna alkaloids/scopolamine, antihistamines such as hydroxyzine, phenothiazines such as chlorpromazine).
If you have one of these disorders, you are likely to have other serious symptoms, such as erectile dysfunction (inability to have or maintain an erection), loss of bladder and bowel control, loss of the normal reflexes of your pupils, or decreased sweating, tearing, and salivation.