MS Fatigue and Heat Sensitivity: The Daily Pattern
For most people with MS, a two-degree rise in core body temperature is enough to slow nerve conduction in demyelinated pathways. That's why a warm shower, a summer errand, or a stressful meeting can produce fatigue that feels wildly out of proportion to the activity.
Key points
- •Roughly 60–80% of people with MS report heat sensitivity (Uhthoff's phenomenon).
- •The dip usually starts 20–40 minutes after the temperature exposure and peaks 1–2 hours later.
- •Recovery is faster with active cooling than passive rest.
- •Predictable heat windows are easier to plan around than random fatigue.
What the data shows
Users who tag afternoon crashes in check-ins most often show a paired signal: outdoor exposure or a warm room in the previous two hours.
What to try
- 01Pre-cool before, not after: cold drink, cool vest, or cold-water foot bath 20 minutes before a demanding block.
- 02Shift high-focus work into your morning window (typically 8:30–11:30 a.m. for this cohort).
- 03Log warm-shower timing — many users find shifting to a lukewarm evening rinse recovers 1–2 hours of next-day energy.
- 04Use a daily forecast to schedule errands on cooler forecast hours, not by convenience.
Frequently asked
Is heat sensitivity permanent damage?
No. Uhthoff's phenomenon is a temporary, reversible slowing of nerve conduction. Symptoms return to baseline once core temperature drops. It's not a relapse and it's not new damage.
How cold is 'cold enough' for a cooling vest?
Most cooling vests target 55–65°F at the skin. That's cool enough to blunt Uhthoff's without triggering shivering, which itself costs energy.
Does air conditioning really move the needle?
Yes — indoor temperature under 72°F is one of the most consistent predictors of a smaller afternoon dip in the aggregated cohort.
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Educational content, not medical advice. Always discuss changes to your treatment or routine with your neurology team.