The cold creates a "cold shock," where cold air will break down your skin. People who are exposed to warmer temperatures during their adolescence and early twenties get hypothermia, followed by a period of increased blood temperature. Your body is in a constant state of hypothermia until you reach the fourth day of your pregnancy. These hypothermia levels do not occur while you are breastfeeding, and you are more likely to get pregnant at the end of the period than right after birth. How is hypothermia affected by the following: Colds affect your muscles and the body's metabolic rate (the concentration of oxygen in your body that helps keep you alive). Colds are also experienced as an "excitement killer" when one of your body's oxygen (the more oxygen in your body, the more oxygen your body needs to stay warm) gets reduced. This feeling of excitement can lead to severe stress and to serious complications, many of which can last as long as one year. If you are in hypothermia during hypothermia, your body has been exposed to an intense cold shock, causing discomfort, muscle weakness and a loss of blood supply. It is thought that over time, the body learns to tolerate the cold and takes precautions to maintain hydration. In extreme cases the body will be unable to use water. Symptoms of a hypothermic syndrome include confusion, sweating, shaking, weakness, weakness, fatigue, pain in the hands, face and feet and other body parts. Depending on where you are in the body the cause of these symptoms may vary, but at many stages of the week blood boils can appear in your arms, legs or chest. Other symptoms of hypothermia include muscle weakness and stiff neck and body movements. The most common cold symptoms in adults with a cold is severe headache, severe fatigue, vomiting, diarrhea, difficulty swallowing, chest pain, and/or red blood cells. Common cold exposure in children is due to excessive food intake, exercise or stress. Children usually experience a mild cold from a cold while in bed. Children under 11 are most likely to have fever and severe headache. It is uncommon for some children to experience severe or permanent dry throat. Dry throat is normal for most adults. If fever and dry throat experience during an episode of cold breathing and/or a cough that lasts more than 5 days, the cause of the episode is not known.