Night Sweats (Nocturnal Hyperhidrosis)
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Red-Flag Causes
- Hormonal and Endocrine Causes
- Medication-Related Causes
- Benign and Environmental Causes
- Evaluation and Workup
- Management
- When to See a Doctor
- Connections
- References & Research
- Featured Videos
Overview
Night sweats (nocturnal hyperhidrosis) are episodes of excessive sweating during sleep that soak through clothing and bedding. They are distinct from simply feeling warm at night — true night sweats require changing sleepwear or sheets and are medically significant when they recur without an obvious environmental cause such as an overheated room or heavy blankets.
Night sweats are common. Roughly 41% of patients in primary care report them, yet the vast majority have benign or treatable causes: menopause, medications, anxiety, or a too-warm sleep environment. However, persistent, drenching, unexplained night sweats — especially when accompanied by fever, unintentional weight loss, or swollen lymph nodes — demand a systematic medical evaluation to rule out malignancy, serious infection, and endocrine disorders.
This page walks through the full spectrum of causes, from immediately life-threatening to simple lifestyle fixes, and explains what tests your doctor will likely order.
Red-Flag Causes
The following causes are less common but must not be missed. If you have night sweats together with any of the features listed below, see a doctor promptly.
Lymphoma
Night sweats are one of the classic "B symptoms" of lymphoma — the triad of drenching night sweats, unexplained fever above 38°C (100.4°F), and unintentional weight loss of more than 10% of body weight over six months. Both Hodgkin's lymphoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma can produce B symptoms, though Hodgkin's is particularly known for them. The night sweats in lymphoma are typically severe (soaking the bed), recurrent, and often accompanied by painless enlarged lymph nodes (in the neck, armpits, or groin), itching (pruritus), and fatigue. Any combination of these features warrants prompt evaluation including blood work and CT imaging.
Tuberculosis
Active tuberculosis — both primary infection and reactivation disease — classically presents with constitutional symptoms: night sweats, low-grade fever, productive cough, blood-tinged sputum (hemoptysis), and gradual weight loss. Night sweats in TB tend to be drenching and are part of the body's immune response to the mycobacterium. Risk factors include close contact with someone who has TB, birth or residence in a high-prevalence country, immunosuppression, homelessness, incarceration, and HIV infection. Evaluation includes tuberculin skin testing (TST) or interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) plus chest imaging.
HIV and AIDS
Night sweats can occur at two distinct stages of HIV infection. During acute retroviral syndrome — the flu-like illness that occurs two to four weeks after initial HIV exposure — symptoms include fever, rash, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes, muscle aches, and night sweats. Later, in advanced HIV disease (AIDS), night sweats are common and may signal opportunistic infections including disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), cryptococcal meningitis, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP), or lymphoma. HIV testing is appropriate for any unexplained night sweats in someone with risk factors or without a recent negative test.
Other Serious Infections
- Endocarditis — infection of the heart valves; presents with fever, a new or changing heart murmur, embolic phenomena (small strokes, painful finger/toe lesions), and night sweats. Blood cultures are essential.
- Brucellosis — caused by Brucella species from unpasteurized dairy or animal contact; produces an undulating fever, profuse night sweats, and joint pain. Often underdiagnosed.
- Malaria — cyclic fevers with chills and drenching sweats, corresponding to the erythrocyte lysis cycle; travel history is critical.
- Histoplasmosis — fungal infection endemic to the Ohio and Mississippi River valleys, acquired from bat or bird droppings; disseminated disease causes night sweats, fever, and weight loss especially in immunocompromised patients.
Other Malignancies
- Carcinoid syndrome — neuroendocrine tumors release serotonin and other vasoactive substances; episodes of flushing, diarrhea, wheezing, and sweating; diagnosed with 24-hour urine 5-HIAA and chromogranin A.
- Pheochromocytoma — adrenal tumor releasing catecholamines; the classic triad is episodic severe headache, palpitations, and diaphoresis (sweating), often with hypertension; screened with plasma free metanephrines.
- Renal cell carcinoma — hematuria, flank mass, and weight loss are the classic triad, but constitutional symptoms including fever and night sweats are common in advanced disease.
- Leukemia — bone marrow infiltration causes systemic symptoms including fever, fatigue, bleeding, and night sweats; CBC with differential is the key first test.
Hormonal and Endocrine Causes
Hormonal changes are among the most common identifiable causes of night sweats, particularly in women.
Menopause and Perimenopause
Hot flashes and night sweats are the hallmark vasomotor symptoms of menopause and the perimenopausal transition. They affect up to 75-80% of women. The mechanism involves disrupted hypothalamic thermoregulation: declining estrogen narrows the thermoneutral zone so that small increases in core body temperature trigger a heat-dissipation response — sudden intense flushing from the chest, neck, and face accompanied by profuse sweating, lasting two to five minutes. At night, these episodes disturb sleep and soak bedding. They may persist for seven to ten years after the final menstrual period and are more severe in women who undergo surgical menopause.
Treatment options include:
- Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) — the most effective treatment; estrogen alone (for women without a uterus) or combined estrogen plus progestogen; discuss individual risks with your doctor.
- SSNRIs — venlafaxine (37.5-75 mg/day) and desvenlafaxine reduce hot flash frequency by about 60%; useful when HRT is contraindicated.
- Gabapentin — 300 mg at bedtime; modest efficacy; useful when SSNRIs are not tolerated.
- Clonidine — alpha-2 agonist; reduces hot flash frequency; side effects include dry mouth and dizziness.
- Cognitive behavioral therapy — improves perceived severity and sleep quality independent of frequency reduction.
Andropause (Male Hypogonadism)
Men with late-onset hypogonadism (declining testosterone) can experience hot flashes and night sweats, though less commonly than menopausal women. Night sweats in this context are often accompanied by fatigue, reduced libido, mood changes, and loss of muscle mass. Evaluation includes morning total testosterone with LH and FSH. Testosterone replacement therapy resolves vasomotor symptoms in confirmed hypogonadism.
Hyperthyroidism
Excess thyroid hormone raises the basal metabolic rate and produces heat intolerance, generalized sweating (including at night), palpitations, unintended weight loss despite increased appetite, tremor, and anxiety. TSH is the key screening test and should be checked in virtually all patients presenting with unexplained night sweats. Causes include Graves' disease, toxic multinodular goiter, and thyroiditis.
Nocturnal Hypoglycemia
Low blood sugar at night triggers epinephrine release, which causes sweating, shakiness, and waking at 2-3 AM feeling clammy and hungry. This is most common in people with diabetes who use insulin or sulfonylureas (e.g., glipizide, glyburide). Contributing factors include too much basal insulin, skipping a bedtime snack, or alcohol use (which blocks gluconeogenesis). Approaches include checking bedtime and 3 AM blood glucose, using a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), adjusting basal insulin dose, and consuming a protein-containing bedtime snack.
Pheochromocytoma
This rare adrenal tumor secretes epinephrine and norepinephrine in bursts, causing paroxysmal episodes of hypertension, severe headache, palpitations, and diaphoresis — the classic triad. Sweating may occur during episodes or persistently. Plasma free metanephrines have a sensitivity exceeding 95% for pheochromocytoma and are the preferred screening test. Surgical resection is curative.
Carcinoid Syndrome
Carcinoid tumors (well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumors, most commonly in the small intestine or appendix) release serotonin and other mediators when they have metastasized to the liver. The resulting carcinoid syndrome causes episodic flushing, watery diarrhea, bronchospasm, and right-sided valvular heart disease. Sweating and flushing are closely linked. Diagnosis relies on 24-hour urine 5-HIAA, chromogranin A, and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy or PET scan.
Medication-Related Causes
Many commonly prescribed drugs cause night sweats as a side effect. Always review the complete medication list when evaluating unexplained night sweats.
Antidepressants (SSRIs and SNRIs)
This is one of the most common medication-related causes. Up to 20% of patients taking SSRIs or SNRIs report excessive sweating, which can be particularly bothersome at night. The mechanism involves serotonin-mediated activation of autonomic pathways controlling sweat glands. Venlafaxine, paroxetine, and sertraline are most frequently implicated. Sweating typically persists throughout the duration of treatment (it does not diminish with time). Options include:
- Reducing the dose if clinically tolerable.
- Switching to bupropion (dopaminergic/noradrenergic; much lower rate of sweating).
- Adding cyproheptadine 2-4 mg at bedtime (serotonin antagonist; limited evidence but often effective).
- Adding terazosin 1-2 mg at bedtime (alpha-blocker; some evidence for SSRI-induced sweating).
Tamoxifen and Aromatase Inhibitors
Women being treated for hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer with tamoxifen (an estrogen receptor modulator) or aromatase inhibitors (letrozole, anastrozole, exemestane) frequently experience hot flashes and night sweats — in 60-80% of treated women. These drugs block estrogen action or production, inducing a pharmacological menopause. Hormone replacement therapy is generally contraindicated in this setting. Alternatives include venlafaxine, gabapentin, and clonidine.
Opioids
Opioid-induced diaphoresis is common and occurs through central and peripheral mechanisms. Night sweats can persist throughout opioid therapy. Naltrexone-based strategies (ultra-low-dose naltrexone added to opioid regimens) have been explored. Buprenorphine is sometimes associated with less sweating than full agonists.
Corticosteroids and Their Withdrawal
Prolonged corticosteroid use suppresses the HPA axis. Rapid taper or abrupt discontinuation can precipitate adrenal insufficiency, characterized by fatigue, nausea, dizziness, and sweating (including nocturnal). A gradual taper is essential after more than two to three weeks of corticosteroid use. Corticosteroids can also cause nocturnal hyperglycemia, leading to hypoglycemic sweating in the early morning hours as insulin counterregulation overshoots.
Other Medications
- Aspirin and acetaminophen taken at bedtime for fever reduction work by promoting heat dissipation through sweating — the mechanism is therapeutic, but the sweating can be dramatic.
- Nicotinic acid (niacin) — prostaglandin-mediated flushing and sweating, particularly at doses used for dyslipidemia.
- Sildenafil (Viagra) — vasodilation and flushing.
- Tricyclic antidepressants — anticholinergic rebound sweating.
- Leuprolide and other GnRH agonists — pharmacological menopause/andropause in cancer treatment.
Benign and Environmental Causes
These causes are common, often overlooked, and easily corrected.
Sleep Environment
The simplest explanation is often the correct one. A bedroom that is too warm, heavy synthetic bedding, a mattress with poor heat dissipation, or sleeping next to another person all raise the ambient sleeping temperature enough to trigger sweating. Electric blankets and memory foam mattresses trap heat. Try: lowering the thermostat to 65-68°F (18-20°C), switching to lightweight cotton or moisture-wicking sheets, using a breathable mattress topper, and wearing light natural-fiber sleepwear.
Alcohol
Alcohol causes cutaneous vasodilation and impairs the body's normal thermoregulatory responses, leading to sweating while falling asleep and upon waking. In alcohol use disorder, autonomic instability during minor withdrawal (including early-morning hours after drinking stops) produces diaphoresis, shakiness, and anxiety. Alcohol also suppresses REM sleep and causes sleep fragmentation with early awakenings accompanied by sweating.
Anxiety and Panic Disorder
Autonomic hyperactivity — the hallmark of anxiety — produces palpitations, sweating, and flushing during the day and can also occur at night. Nocturnal panic attacks, though less common than daytime ones, produce sudden awakening with intense fear, chest tightness, shortness of breath, and drenching sweats. Treatment with SSRIs, SNRIs, or cognitive behavioral therapy addresses both the anxiety and the nocturnal sweating.
Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Night sweats are associated with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Each apneic episode ends with a partial arousal and an autonomic surge (epinephrine release) that can cause diaphoresis. Studies have shown that CPAP therapy reduces nocturnal sweating in OSA patients. Screen with the STOP-BANG questionnaire (Snoring, Tiredness, Observed apnea, high blood Pressure, BMI, Age, Neck circumference, Gender); confirm with polysomnography or home sleep testing if indicated.
Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
GERD does not directly cause diaphoresis but nocturnal acid reflux wakes patients with symptoms that can be confused with night sweats (heartburn, regurgitation, coughing). GERD and night sweats from other causes can also coexist. The distinction matters because treatment is entirely different: acid suppression for GERD versus addressing the underlying cause for true night sweats.
Idiopathic Hyperhidrosis
In a subset of patients — particularly younger, otherwise healthy individuals — no cause is identified despite thorough evaluation. Primary hyperhidrosis can affect axillary, palmar, and plantar areas and may worsen during sleep. Treatment options include topical antiperspirants (aluminum chloride), oral anticholinergics (oxybutynin), iontophoresis, and, for severe cases, botulinum toxin injections or endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy.
Evaluation and Workup
A systematic approach prevents both over-testing and missing a serious diagnosis.
History
Key questions to answer:
- Character: Are clothes and sheets actually soaked (true night sweats), or just feeling warm?
- Duration and frequency: Occasional vs. nightly vs. multiple times per night.
- Timing: Early night, early morning, or variable?
- B symptoms: Unexplained fever? Weight loss of more than 5% in the last six months?
- Respiratory: Productive cough, blood in sputum?
- Lymph nodes: Has the patient noticed any lumps in the neck, armpits, or groin?
- Medications: Complete list, including over-the-counter drugs and supplements.
- Menstrual history: Age, regularity of periods, perimenopause symptoms.
- Alcohol use: Quantity and pattern.
- Travel history: Malaria-endemic areas, TB-high-prevalence countries.
- HIV risk factors: Recent negative test? Risk exposures?
- Prior malignancy or immunosuppressive therapy.
- Sleep environment: Room temperature, bedding, CPAP use.
Physical Examination
- Vital signs including temperature.
- Lymph node exam: cervical, supraclavicular (Virchow's node), axillary, inguinal.
- Thyroid: size, nodules, tenderness.
- Cardiac: new murmur (endocarditis).
- Abdomen: hepatosplenomegaly.
- Skin: pallor, jaundice, purpura, Kaposi sarcoma lesions.
Initial Laboratory Tests
- CBC with differential — lymphopenia, lymphocytosis, atypical lymphocytes, anemia, thrombocytopenia.
- Comprehensive metabolic panel — liver function tests, creatinine, glucose, calcium (hypercalcemia in lymphoma and sarcoidosis).
- TSH — thyroid screening.
- Fasting glucose or HbA1c — diabetes and nocturnal hypoglycemia risk.
- ESR and CRP — nonspecific markers of inflammation/infection.
- LDH and uric acid — elevated in lymphoma.
Targeted Testing Based on Clinical Suspicion
- HIV antigen/antibody test (4th generation) — should be offered broadly.
- Blood cultures — if fever is present; essential if endocarditis is suspected.
- TST or IGRA — TB screening with risk factors or suggestive chest imaging.
- Plasma free metanephrines — if episodic hypertension, headache, or palpitations suggest pheochromocytoma.
- Chest X-ray — mediastinal lymphadenopathy, pulmonary infiltrates, pleural effusion.
- CT chest/abdomen/pelvis with contrast — ordered when B symptoms are present or initial workup is negative and symptoms persist.
- 24-hour urine 5-HIAA — carcinoid syndrome workup if episodic flushing and diarrhea are present.
- LH, FSH, estradiol — menopausal status in women.
- Total testosterone, LH, FSH — hypogonadism workup in men.
- Bone marrow biopsy — when lymphoma or leukemia is suspected and CT scan is non-diagnostic or to stage confirmed disease.
- Polysomnography — when OSA is suspected based on clinical screening.
Management
Treatment of night sweats is always cause-directed. The following summarizes management for the most common scenarios.
- Malignancy or serious infection — immediate specialist referral; night sweats resolve with successful treatment of the underlying disease.
- Menopause — hormone replacement therapy (most effective); SSNRIs (venlafaxine 37.5-75 mg/day); gabapentin 300 mg at bedtime; clonidine 0.1 mg at bedtime; cognitive behavioral therapy. Choice depends on individual risk profile, preference, and contraindications.
- Male hypogonadism — testosterone replacement if confirmed low testosterone and no contraindications (prostate cancer, elevated hematocrit, severe lower urinary tract symptoms).
- Hyperthyroidism — methimazole, propylthiouracil, radioactive iodine, or thyroidectomy depending on cause and severity.
- Nocturnal hypoglycemia — bedtime snack (15g complex carbohydrate + protein), reduction of evening basal insulin dose, review of sulfonylurea dosing, CGM placement.
- SSRI/SNRI-induced sweating — dose reduction, switch to bupropion, add cyproheptadine 2-4 mg at bedtime or terazosin 1-2 mg at bedtime.
- Obstructive sleep apnea — CPAP therapy resolves both apneas and associated night sweats.
- Benign/environmental/workup-negative — lower room temperature to 65-68°F; switch to lightweight moisture-wicking cotton bedding; reduce alcohol intake; anxiety management; breathable sleepwear.
When to See a Doctor
Most people experience occasional night sweats without a serious underlying cause. However, schedule a medical evaluation if your night sweats:
- Occur more than once per week and have no obvious environmental explanation.
- Are severe enough to soak through your clothing and sheets, requiring a change in the night.
- Are accompanied by unexplained weight loss — especially more than 5% of your body weight in six months.
- Are accompanied by fever, even low-grade.
- Come with swollen, painless lumps in your neck, armpit, or groin.
- Occur with a persistent cough, blood in your sputum, or shortness of breath.
- Are new in someone with HIV, a history of cancer, or who is on immunosuppressive medications.
- Are accompanied by episodic severe headaches, rapid heart rate, or very high blood pressure (suggesting pheochromocytoma).
- Occur with waking shakiness, hunger, and heart racing — especially in someone taking insulin or diabetes pills (nocturnal hypoglycemia).
- Continue for more than one month despite removing obvious environmental causes.
Go to the emergency department if night sweats accompany high fever (>39°C / 102°F), severe chest pain, or signs of stroke (facial drooping, arm weakness, speech difficulty) — these could indicate acute endocarditis or another emergent condition.
Connections
- All Symptoms
- Fatigue
- Insomnia
- Hair Loss
- Unexplained Weight Loss
- Lymphoma
- Tuberculosis
- Thyroid Disorders
- Diabetes
- Sleep Apnea
- Iron
References & Research
Key Research Papers
- Mold JW, Mathew MK, Belgore S, DeHaven M. Prevalence of night sweats in primary care patients: an OKPRN and TAFP-Net collaborative study. J Fam Pract. 2002;51(5):452-456. PMID: 12003570.
- Viera AJ, Bond MM, Yates SW. Diagnosing night sweats. Am Fam Physician. 2003;67(5):1019-1024. PMID: 12643362.
- Mold JW, Lawler F. The prognostic implications of night sweats in two cohorts of older patients. J Am Board Fam Med. 2010;23(1):97-103. PMID: 20051550.
- Loibl S, Schwedler K, von Minckwitz G, et al. Venlafaxine is superior to clonidine as treatment of hot flashes in breast cancer patients — a double-blind, randomized study. Ann Oncol. 2007;18(4):689-693. PMID: 17148524.
- Loprinzi CL, Sloan JA, Perez EA, et al. Phase III evaluation of fluoxetine for treatment of hot flashes. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20(6):1578-1583. PMID: 11896107.
- Carpenter JS, Andrykowski MA, Freedman RR, Munn R. Feasibility and psychometrics of an ambulatory hot flash monitoring device. Menopause. 1999;6(3):209-215. PMID: 10486788.
- Freedman RR. Pathophysiology and treatment of menopausal hot flashes. Semin Reprod Med. 2005;23(2):117-125. PMID: 15852197.
- Swerdlow AJ, Higgins CD, Smith P, et al. Myocardial infarction mortality risk after treatment for Hodgkin disease: a collaborative British cohort study. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2007;99(3):206-214. PMID: 17284714.
- Night sweats in lymphoma — B symptoms pathophysiology and clinical significance. Search PubMed: night sweats lymphoma B symptoms.
- Tuberculosis constitutional symptoms and night sweats — epidemiology and diagnosis. Search PubMed: tuberculosis night sweats constitutional symptoms.
- SSRI-induced diaphoresis — mechanism and management strategies. Search PubMed: SSRI antidepressant sweating diaphoresis management.
- Pheochromocytoma diagnosis — plasma free metanephrines sensitivity and specificity. Search PubMed: pheochromocytoma plasma metanephrines diagnosis sensitivity.