Jenn123,
Sweating at night:
- Hypogycemia
- Vitamin D deficiency
Sweating at night can be a sign of hypoglycemia but also *vitamin D* deficiency.
1./
Sweating:
Although it may be seen during the day, it's most often easier to identify the sweating at night when kids are sleeping and therefore stationary (and most easily monitored).
If sweating (mostly head) is from vitamin D3 deficiency, please also watch out for dehydration and/or electrolyte imbalance. They are huge dangerous metabolic side issues on their own, or resulting from vitamin D deficiency's sweating symptom.
Whether sweating from vitamin D deficiency, hypo episodes or even exercise... the loss of liquid and electrolytes can be compounding issues. It's dangerous if not corrected.
Look online into both ("symptoms of" or "dangers of" dehydration. Likewise for electrolyte imbalance) and if you are concerned, follow up with your dr.
2./
Dehydration:
Dehydration can make blood sugar harder to balance. Our son always was (and looked) slightly hypo when this happened.
Something like 80% of our hydration goes to keeping proper humidity for respiration. And almost a litre of fluid is is used at night just through breathing.
*Also.... scabs (crusts) inside nasal passages (nostrils) are a clue to dehydration.
Dehydration, if mild, can be corrected with extra fluids, but at some point, drinking is eventually not enough to rebalance if fluid and salts continue to be lost vs replenished (and balanced). And salts are needed for the proper electrical balance for heart and body function.
3./
Electrolyte imbalance:
The biggest clue is dried salt stains (white) on pillow sheets (fr electrolyte salts) or bleaching on collar rims of shirts. If you see these, your child's body is already losing salts that are needed in the body. Have a chat with the dr. to inform of concerns.
Have a Google search for:
Dangers or symptoms of:
-Dehydration
-Electrolyte imbalance
-Vitamin D deficiency
4./
Dangers of Vitamin D3 deficiency:
It is quite an eye opener and can complicate metabolic issues (and healing) if not in a healthy range.
Our son had this hidden issue and it took a consult with a Mitochondrial dr (and labs) to reveal it. It was literally missed by every other specialist before then.
I think the reason it was never looked into beforehand was that our son showed hypoglycemic symptoms and so that became the main focus. And, honestly, we were giving the "proper amount" of vitamin D daily.
What we (and all dr's below our Mitochondrial dr) weren't aware of yet was that new vitamin D daily requirements were just being released to the Canadian public. Basically, no one was getting enough with the old daily requirement amounts.
This was about 5 years ago. Now Canada has a higher daily requirement.
Luckily, a quick vitamin D test added to any blood work will give current levels and then a simple supplement can fix a deficiency over time.
In Canada, it's an added $30 to test (if not originally ordered by a specialist) as it's not part of regular blood work. Mainly, that's because as a Canadian, we are all considered to be deficient on some level so testing (for most heathy people) is considered redundant.
However, for those with metabolic or malabsorption issues (food nutrients and vit D might also not absorb as well), it's important to track. And if your child ends up being deficient due to a malabsorption issue or needing to track because of a metabolic issue, original testing (or future testing) is free.
Vitamin D has *many* important functions in the system. One is for growth (bone). Also, if it gets low enough, it can drag down iron levels. Recently it's also been linked to the onset of diabetes, I believe. And very low can cause heart issues. These are only a few examples. Have a look into vitamin D deficiency for more symptoms.
5./
How our body converts / stores Vitamin D3:
Our skin converts the sun's rays to vitamin D. Our body then stores it to sustain us over the fall / winter months. By the time spring rolls around we, in northern climates, have little left in reserves. This is also why we all look like we need the sun again. Tired, pale etc. And also why vacationing in the winter literally invigorates us. The sun replenishes our vitamin D stores.
6./
Vitamin D3 storage in our body:
Vitamin D levels in our body stores are highest after summer and lowest coming out of winter. Vitamin D also dips with growth spurts in a child.
7./
Vitamin D3 and sunscreen:
Everyone wants to be safe in the sun and prevent skin cancer. But the problem is that sunscreen blocks out 99% of our skin's ability to convert the sun's rays into vitamin D. By not being able to convert the sun's ray's into vitamin D, our body can not replenish all the vitamin D needed for longterm winter storage. Basically, without a full amount of vitamin D, there is less (or not enough) to last the "non sun" winter months. Hence, potentially serious deficency issues over time if the cycle continues year after year.
8./
Vitamin D3 reserves and the sun:
First, have the vitamin D level checked with a blood test. If it's in fall it will be higher because we are coming out of summer (and the body's reserves should be full or at it's highest). If it's in January to March, it will be lower. It also dips with growth spurts.
If your child is within a normal range (which is a huge range) then you are great. Just keep in mind which season (high stores or low stores) you checked it.
If not in the healthy range, talk with your dr on how often to re-check. We did it once after summer, and once at the lowest (end of winter) to see if supplement regime was working. It takes awhile. Now, we just check yearly.
Our original hurdle in increasing low vit D stores in our son's system was a potential absorption issue. Initially, we weren't sure if his raw / healing system was absorbing this vitamin fully. It improved over time.
Another suggestion, was to put on sunscreen when you reach your outdoor destination (as opposed to at home). That max 15 min of sun (not burning mid day sun) and/or the time it took for the sunscreen to absorb and protect (30 min) will naturally give a good vitamin D conversion boost.
Basically, be in soft sun times -briefly- (well before any pink of skin) for a few minutes before applying sunscreen.
9./
General vitamin D3 guidelines:
I don't normally post numbers but I will this time. Just remember, more is definitely *not* better when taking supplements, and testing for a baseline is always a must.
*Monitoring by a dr is crucial for every issue*
My son was 10 when we were given the below info. So it should be good (for that age - adulthood) for Canadians in general.
VITAMIN D3:
(amounts per day)
May - October = 1000 IU / day
November - April = 2000 IU / day
* Short sleeve weather = 1000 IU / day
* Long sleeve weather = 2000 IU / day
(Because my son was very low, we had him on 2000 IU per day through out the year till his reserves were better. *Only do this with the guidance of a dr.)
10./
Vitamin D3 - Lab work guidelines:
Last year we were given this quick guideline for our then 14 yr old son:
Vitamin D levels of:
25 or less = bad
25 to 75 = insufficient
76 to 250 = sufficient
*As always, please discuss every concern or change in diet first with your specialists.
11./
General Metabolic / Gastro healing:
After life settled down and our son was on the mend from metabolic issues and deficiencies, these are what helped the most:
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin D3
- Bio Gaia (heals gut)
- B12 (check levels)
12./
BioGaia:
USA:
www.biogaia.com/Canada:
www.biogaia.ca/Bio Gaia was a godsend. Check with your child's specialist to see if it would also be a benefit. We were told by our Gastro specialists that it was the only fully natural probiotic that was safe for our son at the time. They used it solely at that Children's hospital.
Bio Gaia is good for all ages -from infant to elderly. And although it's often used to combat infant colic, it's benefit works wonders for all.
Easy to use and convenient - 5 tiny drops per day in any liquid or on any food. Just ask for how long to use (or if daily till healed long term).
5 drops per day = 100 million healthy bacteria put back in the gut per day. In comparison, that would equal having to eat 100 yogurts per day to achieve that health benefit.
13./
Vitamin D drops:
D drops:
ca.vitaminddrops.com/(-we use the 1000 IU per drop kind-)
14./
Vitamin C:
Yes, all people with HFI need it as a supplement.
Additionally, it is needed for iron absorption. Without vitamin C in the system, iron can't properly absorb. Since our bodies do not store vitamin C, it must be given every day. And instead of a daily amt all at once, absorption is better if given in increments through out the day.
At first, we divided a day's dose into 3 (breakfast, lunch, dinner). As healing improved (or health was constant) we dropped it to morning and evening. Now it's once a day for maintenance.
15./
B12:
Always good to check in blood work as B12 makes red blood cells. If low, it can lead to temperament fluctuations, fainting and a host of other serious issues.
When our son was recovering / healing, he ate a lot of B12 rich meat. He craved homemade angus beef burgers for lunch and dinner for awhile... and then just for dinner for months more. It was a HFI safe meal, very rich in nutrients... but the greatest benefit probably came from the B12 within it.
* His liver and health was beautiful from 6mo + on the HFI diet.
B12 is vital. Everything good (including oxygen and all vitamins / nutrients) are transported through red blood cells. Health greatly improves (and quicker) if B12 is in a safe range.
You can get it in tiny pills (swallow) or a type that dissolves under the tongue. Just check for it's use or need -first.
I mentioned these last few suggestions as kids with longterm Gastro flux undoubtably have damage to the gut. And as such, they most likely need a little extra help rebalancing deficiencies or damage caused by years of not being on a diet safe for them.
Hope some of this helps.
All the best,
Lucky