i was told a long time ago that if you sweat alot it's because your body is trying to take place of your kidneys by ridding your body of fluid.
just face it kick start luv, you are just plain weird. (you know we love you)
Perspiring requires an intact nervous system to occur, so the fact that your body is still trying to clear toxins by excess perspiration is a good sign that your nerves are still functioning well. The skin has been called a 'third kidney' because it can filter toxins out of the blood similarly to the way the kidneys do, although much less efficiently. In the days before dialysis, patients in endstage renal failure used to die covered with what was called 'uremic frost,' which was the residue of blood toxins which had been deposited on the skin by perspiration in the body's last, desperate effort to compensate for the lack of renal function.The longer you remain on dialysis, the more damage will occur to the nervous system, and the less perspiring you will be able to do. By the end of almost 9 years on dialysis, I found that I had completely lost the ability to perspire, even in very hot weather.Pica is another topic, but it refers to an abnormal hunger and interest in smells which occurs when people are deprived of essential nutrients, either because of deficient nutrition or because dialysis is leaching important substances out of their body. I had pica for the last 3 years I was on dialysis, and had a craving to eat shoe polish and moth balls, which fortunately I managed to resist. As soon as I received a transplant, the cravings vanished.