One of the most common reasons is because you are breathing through your mouth while you sleep. This most often happens when you have a cold.
Yes
During the night, your throat can get dry due to breathing while asleep. Especially if you breathe through your mouth while sleeping.
Medications with anticholinergic effects can cause dry eyes, dry mouth, and difficult urination or defecation.
well gum choclate and anything else that makes it dry.
Evaporation
Treating dry mouth depends on the condition that is causing it. Generally, dry mouth treatment consists of managing the medical condition causing the dry mouth, increasing saliva flow and preventing tooth decay.Further info can be found at the link below:intelligentdental.com/2010/02/16/how-does-dry-mouth-causes-fatigue/
sympathetic system
your adrenalin when reachs high point can some wtime do funny thing like dry mouth weak legs numbness in certen areas
Sjogren's syndrome is an autoimmune disease that causes chronic dry mouth and eyes.
Yes. Dry mouth causes your nervous system to shut down porduction and can be equated to taking cyanide. I think what you meant to ask is "is dry mouth caused by saliva production being stopped?" And yes, if saliva production is stopped, you would suffer a dry mouth, but the converse of that, the question you asked, means you would have to suck on a wet sponge at times to avoid dry mouth.
The salt takes in all of the water in your mouth which causes it to be dry and therefore you are thirsty
Not exactly. Air conditioning removes moisture from the air (so it can be very humid outside, but not inside). Removing moisture from the air contributes to dry mouth. If you are a mouth breather, you will also dry out your mouth. The dryness of room air, along with dryness from mouth breathing, can cause sore throats--especially in the morning.