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Management of Hyperhidrosis

Postgraduate Medicine, 1972
The topical medications used to control excessive perspiration either absorb excess sweat or block sweat ducts. Methenamine promises to be quite effective for this purpose. Systemic medications, such as tranquilizers or mild sedatives, are often effective when the emotional component is prominent.
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HYPERHIDROSIS

Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1947
ALMOST a century has passed since Claude Bernard, 1 in 1852. noted the vasodilatation which follows section of the sympathetic nerve supply to the side of the head. Ten years later, in 1862, Maurice Raynaud 2 described the disease of the extremities which has since borne his name. Since that time knowledge of the sympathetic nervous system, in both its
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Hyperhidrosis

Pediatric Care Online, 2021
Key Points Hyperhidrosis is most commonly localized to the palms, soles, axillae, or any combination of those.Treatment most often involves lifestyle adaptations and topical agents.Systemic pharmacological agents are available for more severe cases.If generalized, hyperhidrosis may be caused by an underlying systemic disorder.
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Treatment of Hyperhidrosis

Archives of Dermatology, 1987
Human beings have two functionally distinct sets of eccrine sweat glands. One populates the entire skin with the exception of the palms and soles. These thermally responsive glands play a key role in heat adaptation. In fact, thermally responsive eccrine glands are a uniquely human attribute.
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TREATMENT OF HYPERHIDROSIS

Dermatologic Clinics, 1998
Hyperhidrosis, or excessive sweating, is a disorder that may cause social isolation or occupational disability. It may be generalized or localized, and although frequently idiopathic it may be a manifestation of a number of important systemic diseases.
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Secondary Hyperhidrosis: Endocrinopathies and Hyperhidrosis

2018
Endocrinopathies are an important cause of secondary hyperhidrosis and should always be remembered in the differential diagnosis of excessive sweating. The most common endocrine cause of hyperhidrosis is the physiological decrease in the production of sex hormones in menopause and, very rarely, in its male counterpart, the “andropause”.
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[Hyperhidrosis. Hypnotherapy of 2 patients with hyperhidrosis].

Ugeskrift for laeger, 1990
Two cases of hypnotherapeutic treatment of psychogenic hyperhidrosis are presented. In both cases, organic aetiology could be excluded and conventional medical treatment modalities had no effect. In both cases, it was possible to modulate sweating in the trance state within less than a minute, thus supporting other reported cases of the effect of ...
B, Zachariae, P, Bjerring
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Gustatory Hyperhidrosis

JAMA Dermatology, 2021
Grijsen, M.L., Zuuren, E.J. van
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Hyperhidrosis

The Lancet, 1994
G, Claes, C, Drott
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Hyperhidrosis

BMJ, 2009
Julie, Halford   +2 more
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