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Originally Posted by mrsD
Burning ears can be a sign of food allergy or intolerance. It often shows up in children this way. I'd investigate gluten as a culprit first. But other foods may cause burning too. I get burning feet from potatoes, of all things. (potatoes are nightshade veggies, including tomatoes, peppers, eggplant).
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Very interesting; I'd never heard food could cause that type of reaction. I did food allergy testing several months ago at my naturopath's, and stopped eating the things I was allergic to. I also completely changed my diet to gluten free. I am also virtually sugar free, too.
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Cortisol levels fluctuate in a 24 hr pattern. They go up after you eat in the morning, to the highest level of the day. There is a dip around 4pm (teatime), and a smaller peak after supper. The absolute lowest is around 3-4 am.(this is the time where many hospitalized patients die BTW).
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I should add that the ear flare-ups happen most consistently (99% of the time) when the room temperature exceeds 24C (75F).
I have a thermometer beside my computer, and I keep it there to make sure the RT doesn't go above 24C. Sometimes I'll start to feel stressed and feel my ears are hot. I check the thermometer and it's reading 25C. Then I open the door/window/turn on the ceiling fan.
Shortly afterwards, when the temp. drops back to 24C, my ears stop being red and the stress goes away. This has happened many times this year. That's why I think it must be related to my hypothalamus, because it is supposed to control temperature.
In 2011, I've also had issues with my feet feeling as if they are burning. It was particularly bad in the summer. For example, when the outside temperature was above 17C, and I would walk, it would feel as if I was walking on coals.
Gradually the sensitivity subsided but I still get flareups. The interesting thing is I can be sitting with my feet in a cool foot bath, and my feet feel cold. But if I stand up they suddenly feel hot.
It's also weird because in the summer I was able to sunbathe for half an hour and feel comfortable. I can also have a hot bath for 30 mins, too, and feel okay. But if I sit on a chair inside without a cooling pad underneath or lie down, it feels as if I am sitting on a fire.
There's something about contact/pressure from weight. I've been trying to figure out if it's related to the muscle, connective tissue, nerves, or something else.
I got massage therapy but that didn't solve the problem. I took supplements for connective tissue and that didn't work, either.
If the room temperature in my bedroom is higher than 19C, I literally can't get to sleep. I have to regularly check the RT in the hours before I call it a day to make sure it's 19C.
In the past when the RT rose overnight to 20C, I'd wake up feeling as if my side was burning.
Making the mystery even more mysterious is my core temperature now and in the last few years (when I started checking it) is about 96.8F. Why would I have a low core temperature and a high skin temperature?
I believe it's not just feeling hot when my skin is cold (cold foot bath/standing), but also on other occasions (during the night) my skin temp. actually rises and gets stuck at a very high temp.
The temperature sensitivity is peripheral in other areas. Besides my feet, seat, side, and back, my left hand and left thumb flare up.
In the last few weeks, the excess heat feelings have spread occasionally to my neck and lips.
About a week ago, I put on a thin winter hat and wore it for only a few seconds inside before I stepped into the cold garage. My scalp felt as if scalding hot water had been poured onto it.
For several months I've been taking Magnesium (supplements and transdermal app), thinking the nerve sensitivity could be excess calcium causing hyperexcitability, firing nerves without shutting off. That hasn't worked. Now I'm taking Taurine, which is supposed to keep the Mg in the cells, and the Ca out when it shouldn't be there, but it hasn't worked yet.
What do you think is wrong?