Medications that can cause night sweats

Causes of night sweats include medication such as:

  1. Depression medications (antidepressants)
  2. Hormone therapy
  3. A drug used to treat opioid use disorder (methadone)
  4. Drugs used to treat low blood sugar with diabetes (hypoglycemic agents)

Conditions that can cause night sweats

Causes of night sweats include conditions and illnesses such as:

  1. Alcohol use disorder
  2. Anxiety disorders
  3. Autoimmune disorders
  4. Autonomic neuropathy (damage to your autonomic nerves)
  5. Brucellosis (a bacterial infection)
  6. Carcinoid tumors (a type of neuroendocrine tumor)
  7. Drug addiction (substance use disorder)
  8. Endocarditis (an infection of the inner lining of the heart)
  9. HIV/AIDS
  10. Hodgkin lymphoma (Hodgkin disease)
  11. Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) also known as overactive thyroid.
  12. Leukemia
  13. Menopause
  14. Myelofibrosis (a bone marrow disorder)
  15. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
  16. Osteomyelitis
  17. Pheochromocytoma (a rare adrenal gland tumor)
  18. Pyogenic abscess (a pus-filled cavity caused by an infection)
  19. Sleep disorders (such as obstructive sleep apnea)
  20. Stroke
  21. Syringomyelia (a fluid-filled cyst in the spinal cord)
  22. Takayasu's arteritis
  23. Thyroid disease
  24. Tuberculosis
  25. Valley fever (coccidioidomycosis)

Causes shown here are commonly associated with this symptom. Work with your doctor or other health care professional for an accurate diagnosis.

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See also

  1. Adenocarcinoma: How this type of cancer affects prognosis
  2. Adjuvant therapy for cancer
  3. Atypical cells: Are they cancer?
  4. B-cell lymphoma
  5. Bioidentical hormones: Are they safer?
  6. Biopsy procedures
  7. Bleeding after menopause: A concern?
  8. Burkitt lymphoma
  9. Cancer
  10. Cancer blood tests
  11. Cancer diagnosis: 11 tips for coping
  12. Cancer pain: Relief is possible
  13. Cancer risk: What the numbers mean
  14. Cancer surgery
  15. Cancer survival rate
  16. Cancer survivors: Care for your body after treatment
  17. Cancer survivors: Late effects of cancer treatment
  18. Cancer survivors: Managing your emotions after cancer treatment
  19. Cancer treatment myths
  20. Cancer-related diarrhea
  21. Cancer-related fatigue
  22. Castleman disease
  23. Chemotherapy side effects: A cause of heart disease?
  24. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
  25. Chronic myelogenous leukemia
  26. Churg-Strauss syndrome
  27. Curcumin: Can it slow cancer growth?
  28. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
  29. Early HIV symptoms: What are they?
  30. Eating during cancer treatment: Tips to make food tastier
  31. Endocarditis
  32. Follicular lymphoma
  33. Heart cancer: Is there such a thing?
  34. High-dose vitamin C: Can it kill cancer cells?
  35. HIV/AIDS
  36. Hodgkin lymphoma (Hodgkin disease)
  37. Hodgkin vs. non-Hodgkin lymphoma: What's the difference?
  38. Hormone therapy
  39. How cancer spreads
  40. Infographic: Cancer Clinical Trials Offer Many Benefits
  41. Low blood counts
  42. Menopause
  43. Menopause hormone therapy: Does it cause vaginal bleeding?
  44. Monoclonal antibody drugs
  45. Mononucleosis
  46. Mononucleosis and Epstein-Barr: What's the connection?
  47. Mononucleosis: Can it recur?
  48. Mort Crim and Cancer
  49. Mouth sores caused by cancer treatment: How to cope
  50. Myelofibrosis
  51. Myelofibrosis
  52. Myths about cancer causes
  53. No appetite? How to get nutrition during cancer treatment
  54. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
  55. PICC line placement
  56. Primary ovarian insufficiency
  57. Self-Image During Cancer
  58. Small cell, large cell cancer: What this means
  59. Swollen lymph nodes
  60. T-cell lymphoma
  61. Testosterone therapy in women
  62. Tuberculosis
  63. Tumor vs. cyst: What's the difference?
  64. Vaginal dryness after menopause: How to treat it?
  65. Valley fever
  66. When cancer returns: How to cope with cancer recurrence