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Temperature complaints are increasingly visible in social listening because users report chills, hot flashes, or feeling unusually cold during weight-loss phases. Temperature changes can have many explanations and should not be assumed to be medication-caused from a social post. Track timing, dose week, intake, hydration, cycle/menopause context, illness, sleep, and other symptoms. Temperature symptoms feel strange because they are not the classic nausea-and-constipation story. Users often ask whether anyone else has felt the same, which is useful for community validation but not enough for cause. What to track: - Cold, chills, sweating, hot flashes, fever, or night sweats - Shot timing, dose changes, total intake, fluids, and rapid weight change - Cycle or menopause context, illness exposure, sleep, and stress - Other symptoms such as dizziness, pain, vomiting, or weakness Community answer: - The community can validate that others report temperature changes, but BodyM should organize the context and avoid declaring causality. - If fever, severe weakness, or concerning symptoms appear, this is not a self-optimization problem. - This is a good example of why body-state tracking needs more than weight and dose fields. Safety boundary: Seek medical guidance for fever, severe weakness, fainting, chest pain, persistent vomiting, or temperature symptoms that feel unsafe or unusual. Next action: Log temperature sensations with intake, hydration, cycle context, and shot timing for a clinician-ready pattern. Source context: - Facebook GLP-1 adverse event social listening study - Instagram GLP-1 content analysis in women's health - MedlinePlus: Tirzepatide injection
BodyM helps you follow face, body, skin, hair, and clothing-fit changes alongside weight, protein, and weekly context.
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