What may increase your risk for problems from cold temperature exposure Many conditions, lifestyle choices, medications, and diseases
interfere with your ability to heal or fight infection. You may be at risk for
a more serious problem from your symptoms if you have any of the following. Be
sure to tell your health professional. Conditions- Babies and older adults
- A history
of cold injury. Damage to the skin may happen more quickly in areas that had a
cold injury in the past.
- Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome
(FCAS), a genetic condition also known as cold urticaria or cold-induced
hives
- Conditions that may change your mental awareness, such as:
- Mental illness
- Drug or alcohol
use or withdrawal
- Alzheimer's disease or dementia
- Conditions that affect body temperature
regulation, such as:
- Hypopituitarism
- Hypothyroidism
- Hypoadrenalism
-
Hypoglycemia
- Wernicke's
encephalopathy
- Stroke
- History of a head
injury
- Poor nutrition or low body fat
- Skin diseases or
injury, such as burns
- Parkinson's disease
- Conditions that slow the body's ability to make
heat (metabolism), such as:
- Hypothyroidism
- Hypopituitarism
- Adrenal
gland disorders
- A problem or condition present since birth
(congenital defect)
- A history of surgery to an area that had a cold
injury
- Living in poverty or being homeless
- Immobility.
If you are not able to move normally, your body does not make heat as well and
you may feel colder.
Lifestyle choices- Alcohol abuse or withdrawal
- Drug
abuse or withdrawal
- Smoking or other tobacco use
- Heavy
caffeine use
Medications- Blood-thinning medications, such as warfarin,
heparin, and ASA
- Chemotherapy or radiation
therapy
- Corticosteroids, such as prednisone
- Medications
to prevent organ transplant rejection
- Other medications, such as
heart, high blood pressure, antidepressant, or tranquilizer medications
Diseases- Arteritis
- Atherosclerosis
- Burns
- Cancer
- Diabetes
- Hemophilia
- Human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
- Idiopathic thrombocytopenic
purpura (ITP)
- Kidney
disease
- Lupus
- Malnutrition or an eating disorder such
as anorexia nervosa or bulimia
- Multiple
sclerosis
- Peripheral neuropathies
- Peripheral arterial
disease
- Raynaud's phenomenon
- Rheumatoid
arthritis
- Skin diseases
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