Archive for CS
Guest Post: Dan’s Hyperhidrosis Story
Posted by: · on October 11, 2010 | CommentsRecently a reader and subscriber contacted me wanting to share his story. It is fascinating: having undergone ETS which resulted in severe Compensatory Sweating, he has been on a journey to find further treatment. He has had some success, as you will read, but he also has encountered many bumps along the way.
We all hope to find acceptance. When we find the courage to seek the advice and support of others who also suffer from hyperhidrosis, the hope is that we will be embraced. As you will see, Dan has (and I have!) encountered fear and anger amid some of the forums. We all have a story. Here is Dan’s:
I’ve had hyperhidrosis since early teens. Started under the arms, then moved to hands and feet– underarms went to normal (1980).
Like you I just thought I was a freak till age 31 (1991) when I saw my first Neurosurgeon. He injected a giant needle down through the front of my neck to my spine…don’t move he said..yeah right! Anyway he injected a Novocain-like substance onto the ganglia near T2 and T3. I stayed dry on my right hand for 1 hr, cost $900; insurance would not pay. I had just recovered from a motorcycle accident and had damaged those areas (T2 and T3) slightly with hairline fractures. My HH had worsened after the bike crash quite a bit and the doctor thought there may be a correlation.
My hands never dripped but my feet did during karate practice in college. He told me about a very invasive surgery that was done on some actors. I was in LA at the time, having moved from New England. I chose to live with my condition for now, but felt like there was hope.
Things got worse in my thirties and finally in my forties I found these procedures online being done, ETS, non invasive, great results, little risk of any side effects. I saw Dr Reisfeld in LA and he agreed to do the surgery. My insurance, Blue Cross, agreed to cover but suggested I chose a doctor in their network, so I did. Dr Baumgartner. Reisfeld did the clamp method, Dr Baumgartner only did the cutting as he assured me only 1 person in 700 so far ever wanted it reversed (2004). I believed him. As a matter of fact he still tells patient this.
Within a few days I started sweating at night profusely and a couple weeks later it started up during the day. Over the next 5 years it progressively got worse. I sought help.
I spoke with Dr Reisfeld about his new grafting technique (2008). Results were poor and my insurance would not pay (they still pay for cutting though). There is also the risk that you can end up with both CS and your old condition, as some have experienced from grafting.
I then found Dr Duarte in Brazil. We spoke for a couple years over the phone and by email about a procedure he had developed to alleviate sweating in the torso. I needed my records from the original surgery and had a very hard time getting that. I also had a hard time getting any of these doctors to speak to each other. These days it seems they’ve all gone on their own, and don’t share discoveries or ideas any longer… a common problem in modern for-profit medicine.
The procedure was a success (June 2010) and I’m awaiting Dr Duarte’s second procedure if necessary to alleviate the sweating below the waist; sometimes it’s less sometimes it’s more…. He wants to see how it evolves over time first, as he has varied results, and was honest with me about that. I also spoke with former patients who had different degrees of sweating remaining below the waist.
I’m also talking with Dr Thorpe in England about a technique he has that has had some positive results for CS, but results are varied.
I’m determined to fight this as my quality of life ticks away ever day. Having my upper body fixed really makes me want to get all the way back.
I sweat from the head and slightly under the arms. I’m very athletic and climb every morning. I believe my introduction of eating spice before exercising for a few years induced the head sweats. I also sweat all over in a sauna and have read that others do as well, leading me to believe in a secondary system in our bodies.
Like you, humidity is my enemy, as is my mind. I believe the sensation of wetness on the skin triggers more sweat with someone suffering from CS. If I splash water on my face in the sauna it starts to sweat, same with other body parts. Dryer air, a low dew point really makes a difference more than temperature.
I’m glad I found your site, you’re an honest and helpful person. I had been in a couple forums and as soon as I mentioned additional surgery a witch hunt ensued and I was digitally tarred feathered and labeled an “agent” of these doctors, or I was just plain censored. So much rage and other negative emotions comes from this plight of ours. I think it stems from years of hiding and feeling different…even from childhood discomfort of having “wet diapers” So much fear, you spoke of it so well in your handbook Miss Conaghan, thank you for that.
I’ve been thinking of starting my own forum and disallowing any crosstalk so people can express their stories without fear of criticism (something that make us sweat more!). Even the International Hyperhidrosis Society has sort of “disowned” us.
I also am trying to bring some of these doctors together like Duarte, Reisfeld, and Thorpe to share all their patient experiences in some sort of anonymous database. HH and CS are such an enigma one that can be solved by sharing information. Thank God for the Internet and for people like you.
I would like to thank Dan for his courage in telling his story. I do need to state that I am publishing Dan’s words and experiences and do not endorse or have an opinion, negative or otherwise, about any of the individuals his story names.
Recipe for a Good Old-Fashioned HH Episode, Post-ETS
Posted by: · on July 11, 2010 | CommentsIf you ever thought that undergoing ETS would end the good ol’ fight-or-fight emotional sweating episode, read on, my friend. As I have said in a few messages here and there, but need to say Loud and Clear right here on the blog, please do not assume that having ETS will cure you from Hyperhidrosis. Sure, there may be some lucky individuals who have had sympathectomies that have mild compensatory sweating, dry feet and dry hands, but I believe that they are in the (lucky) minority. Compensatory Sweating still occurs for most of us, and its patterns and frequency are all over the board, from what I can guess. For me, it hasn’t been bad, but I am still vulnerable to the occasional nasty, unforeseen attack.
Today, I got zapped. Here’s the recipe for my…
Old Fashioned Sweating Episode
- 1 linen top likely to show moisture
- 1 pair olive khaki pants guaranteed to show sweat
- ADD 2 cups of Extra Virgin Idiocy in assuming this would be a safe choice for Church in the middle of July
- WHISK together, with a Dash of Arrogance that I no longer Need to Worry About These Things
- FOLD into mix:
- 1 missing 9 year old child whom husband, responsible for bringing the Rest of the Children to Mass while you drop off youngest child to birthday party, mistakenly leaves alone at home
- 1 heaping Tablespoon of Angst that said child is Hysterical at Home, Alone (while Freaked Out Husband leaves to fetch her)
- 1 well-meaning Usher at Church that asks you to Bring Up the Gifts!!!
- 6 cups Severe Anxiety that the Entire Congregation will have an Unobstructed View of Damp…ahem…Pants as you walk up the aisle bringing up gifts
- ADD to this,
- 2 more people, aforementioned husband and child (amused by events rather than hysterical), crowding into the pew accompanied by waves of Body Heat
- MARINATE in mounting Panic and typical Fight-or-Flight Trapped Feeling whilst sweat pops out literally Everywhere, including HANDS that are NOT supposed to SWEAT anymore…
- COOK for approximately 40 minutes in Warm and Humid Church
……and Voilà! You have one fully formed, rich, decadent Post-ETS, Put-You-Right-Back-in-Your-Place Sweating Episode!
Oh, and in case you were wondering…..Yes. I did bring up the Gifts, all the while holding up an imaginary Middle Finger at my Hyperhidrosis (yes, Imaginary, it was Church!). And, no, the moisture was not showing as I had (silently) convinced myself it would during that 1/2 hour I was supposed to be worshiping.
FYI, on a serious note: ETS disconnects the nerve(s) that make you sweat in your hands (and underarms and head, depending on the specific surgery)— depending on the technique, whether they are cut, removed, clamped, or merely snipped (as mine were), the surgery does not re-set your overactive Sympathetic Nervous System. Your sweating may end up being more under control, as mine is, because the absence of hand sweat (or blushing) lowers the anxiety and the triggers that normally cause an episode are no longer usually there. But Science has not come up with anything that cures the basic malfunction that is responsible for Primary Hyperhidrosis: an abnormally overactive Sympathetic Nervous System.
In short, our thermostats are broken! Every “cure” that we try out, every treatment, really just ranges from Band-Aids to duct tape. Sometimes these things don’t work; often they do, but with the occasional glitch. …or zap…!
Start a Website About Hyperhidrosis? Am I Nuts?
Posted by: · on April 15, 2010 | CommentsYou may (or may not!) be wondering how and why I would choose to tell the whole world about my Hyperhidrosis by starting a website about it. Here is how HyperhidrosisAndMe came to be:
Having hidden HH my whole life, I took a really drastic step in the summer of ’09: I made the decision to start up a website about Hyperhidrosis. I was learning about affiliate marketing to help launch a business I was trying to start with 3 partners, when we decided it would be a quicker learning curve if I started my own blog first. I will never forget looking at my sister (one of the partners), holding up my hands, and saying “I could blog about this.” My sister’s eyes got big and she said, “Oh my God! Yes! It would be so good for you! And you could help people!” And in the heat of that moment I was like, “Yeah! It would help people!” Etc, etc, etc. Then of course I rejected that thought because I didn’t think I could ever, ever “come out” in such a big–huge–way. But the idea followed me and I couldn’t stop thinking about it.
I couldn’t stop thinking about my years of hiding and how much effort it had all been. For what? So that people would like me for who I wanted them to think I was, but indeed was not? Why not be honest, really honest, for once in my life? It was ironic, how I had painted a picture of myself that I hid behind: my friends praised me for being a genuine person, for being sincere and honest. Genuine and sincere, yet I couldn’t entrust any of them with the ugly, sweaty, embarrassing truth. I know, it sounds like I’m being pretty hard on myself (I’m very good at that!); but that really is the way I lived my life.
The idea of living in integrity started to take root. Some days I wanted to shake it off, though, because the reality of it scared me. Some days I asked myself if I really wanted to immerse myself in a subject that I had spent my life denying. Since my ETS surgery, I had tried so hard to put HH behind me despite the frequent episodes of CS. Perhaps not having my hands sweat as often helped me put enough distance between myself and HH that it allowed me to delve into it; who knows?
After a month or so of going back and forth, I was in Door County, Wisconsin with my family and while on a walk/run (gotta be honest, you can’t call what I do “jogging”), a song on my iPod came on, and that was “it”. I knooooowwwww how corny it sounds but it really happened this way! The song is “Unwritten”; sung and co-written by Natasha Bedingfield. I was on my usual route when I decided to hang a left and labor up a steep hill. The song came on and there I was overlooking the beautiful countryside with the words in my ears blaring:
“Feel the rain on your skin/ No one else can feel it for you/ Only you can let it in/ No one else/ No one else can speak the words on your lips/ Drench yourself in words unspoken/ Live your life with arms wide open/ Today is where your book begins/ The rest is still unwritten….”
The rest of the song– pretty much every word– spoke to me just as clearly. It really was a watershed moment in my life. I don’t remember “walking” back to our resort– just getting to our room, grabbing a notebook and writing down what I intended to be my first blog post. If you read my posts “Hiding In Plain Sight I & II”– indeed, the first posts on this site– except for a little editing, that is what I wrote on that July day.
Yes, I have had moments when I questioned the sanity of baring my soul to strangers. I have been overwhelmed with the sheer amount of information I have had to sift through and the volumes of writing I have had to do to get this right. Again, please forgive my “corny” moments here, but if you are reading this and you start to explore this site and it actually helps you, then I know I am doing exactly what I should be doing.
“Reaching for something in the distance/ So close you can almost taste it/ Release your inhibitions/ Feel the rain on your skin!”







