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Sweaty
Face - detailed information on hyperhidrosis
Hy*per*hi*dro*sis
Excessive or profuse sweating. SYN hyperephidrosis, hyperidrosis,
polyhidrosis, polyidrosis, sudorrhea from Stedman's Medical Dictionary.
Hyperhidrosis,
also known as excessive sweating, is a medical condition. There
is no single cause of it. Because it is not a disease, it can be
a symptom of another medical condition such as a disorder of the
nerves. For some people, there may be no explainable cause for their
excessive sweating, and they may be considered to have a medical
condition known as essential (idiopathic or primary) hyperhidrosis.
This may be due to over activity of the nerves that send signals
to the sweat glands in the skin, the sympathetic nervous system.
Sometimes this idiopathic form of hyperhidrosis can be genetically
transmitted, and it often runs in families; this form may first
show up in early childhood.
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Other
people may have sweating as a symptom of known medical conditions,
such as an overactive thyroid gland (hyperthyroidism), from nerve
damage due to diabetes (autonomic dysfunction) or spinal cord injuries,
with psychiatric disorders such as panic attacks or anxiety disorders,
or even due to the hot flashes associated with menopause. Many people
who have hyperhidrosis may also have reddening of the skin, which
is most noticeable in the face as blushing, due to the same nerve
over-activity. Some medications may by themselves cause excessive
sweating, such as the medications often used for prostate cancer,
AIDS, or pyridostigmine (Mestinon™) used for the condition myasthenia
gravis.
Sweating
is a normal bodily function that serves to cool off the skin and
lubricate the skin (especially in areas that may rub against other
areas of skin, such as under the arms, under the breasts, and between
the legs). Special microscopic glands (sweat glands) in the deep
layer of the skin, the dermis, make sweat by filtering fluid and
salts out of the blood, and secreting this fluid up through small
tubes in the skin, the sweat ducts, that empty out into small pores
at the top layer of the skin, the stratum corneum (Wenzel FG & Horn
TD, Nonneoplastic disorder of the eccrine glands, J. Am Acad Dermatol.
1998 38:1-17). Some
areas of the skin have many sweat glands, while other areas have
relatively few; they are present in the highest concentration in
the palms and soles. In addition to sweat glands, skin also has
oil glands that surround almost every hair root, the sebaceous glands.
Finally in some areas, such as the underarm and the groin, are found
a special, unusual sweat gland called an apocrine gland, which secretes
a very thick type of sweat that has a large amount of fatty chemicals
in it. These chemicals can be broken down by bacteria on the surface
of the skin to create the smelly chemicals that are mostly responsible
for body odor. These glands can occasionally get diseased or infected,
and may lead to a condition known as hidradenitis suppurativa, which
is a serious medical condition that may require antibiotics or surgery
to cure the disorder.
Two
different sets of nerves supply these many glands, the sympathetic
nerves, which tend to increase sweating when one is excited, nervous,
or afraid (the "fight or flight response"), and the parasympathetic
nerves, which tend to decrease sweating of the skin. At the ends
of the nerves, the body releases special chemicals called neurotransmitters,
which carry the electrical signal from the nerves onto the cells
near the nerve endings. For the sweat glands, the chemical at the
tips of the sympathetic nerves is acetylcholine; too much of this
chemical present next to the sweat glands stimulates them to produce
large amounts of fluid. Many doctors feel that one of the biggest
problems in people with idiopathic hyperhidrosis is the fact that
the sympathetic nerves are over stimulated, making the neurotransmitters
"go haywire" at the nerve endings. Many activities that stimulate
the nervous system, such as strong smells, spicy foods, increased
air temperatures, exercise, high emotional excitement, stress or
nervousness may cause attacks of excessive sweating through sympathetic
nerve over activity.
In
order to decrease sweating, one has to either cut down the nerve
impulses to the sweat glands, cut down on the acetylcholine, destroy
the glands, or block off their ducts, so that the sweat cannot flow
out onto the skin. One main way to cut down sweating is to use a
medicine on the surface of the skin to cause the sweat to thicken
and plug up the ducts, which is how the antiperspirants that are
often used under the arms to decrease underarm sweat and odor work.
These usually contain aluminum metal salts, such as aluminum chloride,
which have to be frequently reapplied, or else the clumps in the
ducts will get dissolved, unblocking the ducts and permitting sweating.
The
sweat glands themselves can be destroyed, but since they are so
small and numerous, and are located deep in the skin, methods such
as electrolysis (which uses electric currents to destroy the hair
roots) are not very practical. If only a special area of the skin,
such as the underarms, cause sweating problems, there have been
some reports on the use of liposuction to remove the apocrine sweat
glands there (Rowland Payne C & Doe PT, Liposuction for axillary
hyperhidrosis, Clinical and Experimental Dermatology 1998, 23:9-10).
Electric
currents through the skin, iontophoresis, may disrupt the function
of the sweat glands, preventing them from working for a long time.
With the use of a home operated machine, a small electric current
is sent through the skin from one area to another. The electric
current "shocks" the sweat glands, and they stop making sweat until
they recover. By using this machine regularly, a few times a week,
prolonged dryness in the area of treatment can be obtained, that
can last for weeks. This may work well if only a few small areas
of skin have the excessive sweating problem, but requires frequent
treatments. The nervous supply to the sweat glands can be interrupted
by cutting or destroying the sympathetic nerves. Since these nerves
are extremely small, they are usually reached at areas near the
spinal cord, where many nerves run together into structures known
as sympathetic ganglia, before they spread out throughout the body.
Once the nerves are cut or destroyed, the sweat glands that are
supplied by those nerves stop secreting sweat; in addition, other
parts of the skin also lose their sympathetic nerve supply, so the
skin may lose its ability to control its temperature and blood flow.
This may lead to paleness and coldness of the skin where its nerve
supply has been disrupted. People who suffer from blushing may find
this side effect desirable, as they will lose the ability to blush
in those areas affected by the surgery. Medication may be taken
internally that works to block the neurotransmitter, acetylcholine,
from stimulating the sweat glands. Some of the more useful medications
include the anticholinergics (such as glycopyrrolate or atropine),
some antihistamines, some antidepressants, and some of the tranquilizers.
However, these medications will also affect other parts of the body,
and may lead to possible side effects, including dry mouth, drying
of other secretions, constipation, or other side effects. One new
approach that may work on small areas of skin that have excessive
sweating is to inject botulinum toxin (Botox®) into small areas
of the skin (such as the underarms), which blocks the acetylcholine
for up to a few months before it wears off .
The
above information and image of the salivary gland is copyright information
prodided courtesy of www.excessivesweating.org.
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