Temporary prickly heat rash?

I enjoy the cold, and I would prefer being uncomfortably cold over uncomfortably hot. After I've spent some time outside my body gets nice and cool, but when I go inside a building with heating and my body heats up I feel the exact symptoms of "Prickly heat rash" but I don't believe I've ever gotten the blistery looking things that come from it, and I generally only feel it for about 30 seconds to a minute.

I seem to be the only person out of all my family and friends who gets this too, as my dad constantly has a fire going in our wood stove in our house.

So basically what I'm asking is, is this normal to get in people/do I have the prickly heat rash skin disease? I feel like nobody understands what I'm feeling when I get angry at my parents for making the house freakishly hot all the time.

Comments

  • I wonder if you have a mild case of cholinergic urticaria? If so, then taking an antihistamine several minutes before you expect your body to be warmed up would help block that reaction.

  • warmth rash remedies are often fairly uncomplicated and incorporate cooling the exterior and physique and protecting the affected epidermis components dry. Cool showers and mild-weight loose installation clothing will help. besides, staying out of the sunlight could additionally be a stable concept. searching for an air-conditioned environment is efficient. in many circumstances, the prickly rash will disappear by employing itself in a short quantity of time, if the uncomplicated suggestion given above is accompanied. Calamine lotion can soothe the itch, yet stay away from any oil-based products by using fact those could lead on directly to further epidermis pore clogging and avert the warmth rash healing technique from taking place.

  • hey i get that too. i don't know what it is but i'm gonna check the answers you get. when people notice my hands they're like, "oh my god! your hands" it feels like my hands were cold, and reacted when the hot air hit them too quickly. i could tell it's just the skin.

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