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Menopause Matters magazine ISSUE 75 out now. (Spring issue, March 2024)

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Author Topic: Wool Duvets, Pillows and Mattress Toppers, Can They Help Night Sweats?  (Read 3363 times)

Kathleen

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Hello ladies.

I've read that all natural wool duvets, pillows and mattress toppers can help with temperature control so I wondered if  using them would reduce the intensity of night sweats?

Obviously there is a lot of info and advertising online but  I wondered if any of you had experience of these items.
They are quite expensive but the investment would be worth it for a good night‘s sleep.

I look forward to reading any comments ladies and wishing you all well.

K.
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Dotty

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Kathleen- if you are still getting night sweats you need to increase your Oestrogel.
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Kathleen

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Hello Dotty.

Thank you for your reply and you are right of course! I have an appointment near the end of June and I will ask to increase my gel.  Clearly two pumps aren't cutting it but at sixty one and eight years post meno I had hoped that my current dose would be enough but maybe not.

Thanks again for your comment and take care.

K.
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CLKD

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  • changes can be scary, even when we want them

I ditched our duvet years ago as it made me too hot.  Made me sneezy.  Now we have sheets, electric blanket and a coverlet.  On/off all night long  ::).  Wool supposedly 'breathes' ?  Maybe try it and report back as Chief Sheeps' Wool Tester ?  ;)
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Wilks

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I have a mattress with a “summer side” which has a layer of cotton just under the outermost cover and a “winter side” which has wool instead. This, I'm not wholly convinced that wool would keep you cooler.
A young male GP advised me to keep a cold wet towel by the bed and wrap it round my neck each time I overheated  ;D
Needless to say, I went for HRT instead.
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Daisydot

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What about a chillow pillow,I didn't like it but lots of people swear by themx
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CLKD

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  • changes can be scary, even when we want them

Our mattress is like that but I can never remember which side is 'up'  ::)

I think the idea is that wool being natural 'breathes' ......
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Dancinggirl

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To answer the original question; I haven't tried wool duvets or mattress toppers but I do find that a feather duvet is better at temperature control than anything synthetic. I bought the temperature control duvet from John Lewis but found I got hotter with this than my 2.5 tog feather duvet. In winter I use a 4 tog feather duvet. The window in the bedroom is only closed when the temperature outside goes below 0 degrees.
I do have a cotton mattress protector that is filled with cotton wadding and this is nice and cool. I also have a cotton pillow protector.
I don't think you can get a Chillow any more but if you chill some water in the fridge, you can fill a hot water bottle with this and that can really help to cool down when you wake feeling hot and sweaty. DG x
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CLKD

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  • changes can be scary, even when we want them

? frozen ice-blocks in a pillow case?
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Daisydot

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That'd be pretty uncomfortable CLKD  ;D
You can still buy JML chillow pillows from amazon £9.99 x
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Kathleen

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Hello again ladies.

Very interesting to read your comments and thanks for your input as always.

I have been doing some research and I'm going to start a new thread about melatonin production, disturbed sleep and type of bed linen as more ladies may be interested in what I've read.

Thanks again ladies and take care.

K.
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Robin

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Excellent news Kathleen. I'm keen to know more about melatonin

Robin
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