Archive for treatments
New Axillary Hyperhidrosis Treatment Announced
Posted by: · on March 28, 2011 | CommentsThe International Hyperhidrosis Society has announced in their newsletter, called Sweat Solutions, that a new FDA approved product has been developed to treat axillary hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating of the underarms). For the millions of folks who suffer from this, this news is HUGE! This treatment does not involve surgical procedures, oral medication, or multiple injections. Permanent– yes, allegedly permanent– relief is seen after two doctor visits. Really– this is the claim. (!!!)
The new treatment involves the delivery of electromagnetic energy to the underarm area. This electromagnetic energy results in the destruction of the sweat glands. You can read more about this treatment at IHHS’s SweatHelp.org. Developed by Miramar Labs, the name of the treatment is miraDry, which also has its own website.
If results are what they are claiming, and there are no serious side effects, this could be a game-changer. I don’t know about you, but MY first thought was, “Would it work on hands?” Or for that matter, other troublesome parts of the body? I could not find that question either asked or answered anywhere, but time will surely tell.
I know the axillary area is unique in that the sweat glands there are highly clustered and accessible, but it seems to me that if the sweat glands are being destroyed by electromagnetically generated heat, why SHOULDN’T it work on the hands? With the SDLA (sub-dermal laser ablation) procedure, the sweat glands are basically sucked out, which obviously would not be possible in the hands or feet. But this? I don’t know, maybe… I sure can hope, right?
I will post any updates on the exciting development. If anyone reading this either experiences this treatment or hears about its usage on other body areas, please contact me by either posting a comment here or using the Contact page. Thanks!
Hyperhidrosis Treatments: Know Your Real Options
Posted by: · on October 14, 2010 | CommentsIf you are at all new to this site, I would like to well– first, WELCOME you
— and then let you know that you have found a safe place to: a) read about the journeys of others like you, b) submit your own stories or memories of how hyperhidrosis has affected your life, and c) find out all you can about the real, proven treatment options available, as well as find strategies and clothing and various products to help you manage your daily life. By participating in any or all of these things here, you can give yourself the opportunity to turn the tables on your hyperhidrosis. What do I mean by that? In a word, CONTROL.
Ask yourself– does your hyperhidrosis control you? Does it keep you from doing things you want to do? Do you make decisions every day based on whether or not your body will betray you? I am going to make an educated guess and say a loud YES.
So take your control back. Take your power back from this pain-in-the-ass disorder.
Start with your Treatment Options by clicking! There ya go.
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.
HyperhidrosisAndMe Weekly Spotlight: Insurance Coverage for Hyperhidrosis
Posted by: · on September 7, 2010 | Comments
The spotlight this week is on health insurance coverage for hyperhidrosis. I know, YAWN. Please keep reading, though– I have a few points to make that could help with your treatment!
If you have….by any chance… read my report on ETS (on your right, over there →
), you may know that you really MUST be proactive in dealing with your coverage.
§
Herewith, a few facts and tips:
- In case you haven’t noticed (sarcasm alert), hyperhidrosis does not seem to get much attention in society at large, and also is the red-headed stepchild in the medical community as well. This tends to result in health insurance policies either giving extremely narrow coverage parameters, or ignoring the disorder altogether.
- You really need to know what your policy does or does not cover. Absolutely do not, DO NOT, call your insurance company and ask if something is covered. Read the damn thing yourself. This was a mistake that I made that very nearly cost my family $20,000. It didn’t cost me in cash in the end, but the distress it caused was very real and completely unnecessary. Hypothetically: You call your insurance company and ask, “Am I covered for Botox treatments for hyperhidrosis?” The person on the other end (who gets paid whether or not the answer you get is accurate or not) may respond, “Well, is it medically necessary?” To which you reply, “Yes, absolutely, I think so!” That person then replies, “Well, then you’re covered!” Then, you merrily go on your way and get the treatment. Weeks or months later, a letter comes in the mail from your beloved insurance company informing you that you did not take the proper steps to prove medical necessity and therefore coverage for the treatment is rescinded. And you are left with the bill. Really. That happened to me, but the treatment was not Botox. It was about 20× more expensive.
- Oftentimes, the aforementioned “proper steps to prove medical necessity” for anything invasive and/or expensive require you to do any number of things, such as taking oral medication, using a prescription topical treatment, iontophoresis, etc. Skip any of these steps at your own expense.
- Many policies I have reviewed will only pay for treatment of hyperhidrosis if hyperhidrosis is directly causing skin infections or diseases. This means that you are only eligible for relief from sweating if the sweating is causing you bodily harm. Because we are apparently not suffering enough. (sorry, insurance makes me snarky)
- If your insurance company balks at covering your treatments, a letter of medical necessity from your doctor may change their stance.
- If your insurance company refuses to cover your treatments or if you feel you are being treated unfairly, do not hesitate to contact the insurance commission for your state. This is one of the things that I did, and I think it really helped my case.
- Keep a written record of all communication between you and the insurance company: dates, names, brief outlines of conversations. Also print out any emails and keep any letters. Again, that probably factored in my little victory.
- If it is worth the expense, don’t be afraid to get a lawyer involved. Once again, I did!
- For more information and to download letters of medical necessity and other helpful forms, go to http://www.SweatHelp.org, which is the website for the International Hyperhidrosis Society. See “Insurance Tools”– they have it all covered (pun intended
)!
Please keep in mind that it costs insurance companies NOTHING to rescind payment or promise of payment for a procedure/treatment you have already received! My lawyer told me that the vast majority of people who are denied coverage just accept the decision. Don’t be one of them.
You have a medical disorder: Your Sympathetic Nervous System does not work properly. You do need medical intervention to correct it. You pay for medical insurance; therefore, you have the right to coverage for the medical interventions your hyperhidrosis requires. It is wrong that you should have to fight for that. But you may have to– and I hope you will.
If we don’t fight for what we are entitled to, how will anything change? Do you want to fight insurance companies for the next 20 years? I don’t.
HyperhidrosisAndMe Weekly Spotlight: Antiperspirants
Posted by: · on August 4, 2010 | CommentsThis week I will be focusing The Spotlight on my page that introduces antiperspirants formulated for Hyperhidrosis, called, creatively, Topical Treatments (Anti-perspirants and Medicated Wipes). Having never really given much thought to types of antiperspirants before starting this site, I was staggered by the options that exist.
It quickly became clear to me that all antiperspirants can be categorized into 4 different levels:
- Regular antiperspirants– The various brands and forms of antiperspirants that people who need a normal amount of protection use.
- “Clinical-Strength” antiperspirants– These products are marketed for Hyperhidrosis and contain a higher concentration of the active ingredient aluminum zirconium trichlorohydrex. These antiperspirants are most effective when applied at night, before bed, to completely dry skin. Drugstore.com has a complete selection of these antiperspirants. Click here to see for yourself.
- “Prescription-Strength” antiperspirants– Containing a different, more potent active ingredient called aluminum chloride hexahydrate, these products are definitely stronger. However, they can also cause uncomfortable side effects such as burning and itching. There are many brands on the market, and each brand attempts to prevent these side effects with slightly different approaches. If one does not work for you or has uncomfortable side effects, it is worth it to keep looking. Several of these products offer specific formulations for palmar and plantar sweating! Please click on the page link for more complete information.
- Prescription Antiperspirants such as Drysol and Hydrosal constitute the final and strongest level of antiperspirant one can buy. With up to 8% higher concentration of aluminum chloride hexahydrate, the chances of itching and burning are more significant. A Doctor’s prescription (in the United States, at least) is required.
So there you have a very abbreviated explanation of All Thing Antiperspirant. Please refer to each category’s page for more complete information, including specific side effects reported, more information on ingredients, and brands I have used and/or researched.
Also worth considering are Med e Tate Wipes (to be used as a boost while out and about rather than one’s primary antiperspirant), as well as my personal favorite, Kiehl’s Superbly Efficient Anti-Perspirant & Deodorant Cream, which is terribly versatile (goes Anywhere
).
Remember, no matter what your Treatment of Choice ends up being (if antiperspirants aren’t enough and you use Iontophoresis, meds, or even Botox), you will still need a good antiperspirant. Make sure you find one you really like, because knowing you are protected from odor and even hopefully from wetness can really help boost your confidence. Let’s face it, we need all of that we can get!
Hyperhidrosis Gets a Little Press!
Posted by: · on July 23, 2010 | CommentsEarlier this summer, I received an email from a Public Relations agent who was helping Fox News in New York City put together a piece on a surgical procedure that alleviates Axillary Hyperhidrosis. The PR firm was looking for a person with Hyperhidrosis who would be willing to undergo this procedure on camera. I was not able to help them find someone, but it’s great that they did.
The doctor in the story, Dr. Jacobs, calls this procedure “Sweat Lipo”. This procedure, described in detail on my page “Localized Axillary Procedures”, is also known as Subdermal Laser Ablation. Basically, the idea is to suck out the sweat glands in the underarm region. Surgeons have offered variations on this procedure for years, but in the past there was a significant amount of scarring and extended recovery times. Now, because of advances in technology, surgeons are able to make a very small incision to do the surgery and there is virtually no scarring and little down time.
I think that Dr. Jacobs does a very good job concisely describing what Hyperhidrosis is and how it affects daily life.
Here is the story:
FoxNewsChannel
I want to express my admiration to the gentleman in the story who was brave enough to not only talk about his challenges on camera, but also allowed the camera crew to show his sweating up close. He did his part to show millions of viewers that Hyperhidrosis interferes with life in every way– and he was so matter of fact about it, and not ashamed. WELL DONE, SCOTT!
While surgery is always a drastic measure and comes with inherent risks, I think that this “sweat lipo” is a great option for those with Axillary Hyperhidrosis. That is, it’s a great option if done by an experienced, excellent surgeon. If you think this procedure is for you, I recommend thoroughly researching what the procedure is (start by reading my page on it, linked above) and finding a surgeon you can have confidence in. Also check into your insurance coverage and any or all costs involved. Wish they could do it for hands and feet!
“A Patient’s Journey”: A First-Hand Look at Early Childhood Onset Hyperhidrosis and Iontophoresis
Posted by: · on June 29, 2010 | CommentsMany of you will find pieces of this story to be sadly familiar. Those of us who have Hyperhidrosis can relate similar heartbreaking childhood experiences. Laura’s journey and her description of her treatment of choice, Iontophoresis, allow us to see how this oft-ignored treatment really can make a difference for some.
Please note that the practice of using oral meds in the Iontophoresis solution is not a common one either in the United States or in England, which is where Laura lives.
This paper was sent to me by Hyperhidrosis UK (http://www.HyperhidrosisUK.org), and I am posting it here with their written permission. This paper was previously published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ).
Practice
A Patient’s Journey
Hyperhidrosis
By: Julie Halford, specialist nurse , adviser 1,2, Laura Hunt, patient3, George Millington, consultant dermatologist 4
At age 5 this patient was offered limited and unpleasant treatments for her hyperhidrosis. Now an adult, she describes how iontophoresis has greatly reduced the symptoms of her conditions.
Hyperhidrosis and its management have been a huge part of my life since I was 5 years old. As I nervously awaited being reprimanded for doing something typically naughty, I noticed the sweat on my hands. More than being clammy, they ran with sweat, and as I cupped them the sweat rested in pools in my palms. I remember feeling embarrassed, frightened, and fascinated by the sight. Ever since, my life has consisted of finding increasingly cunning ways of trying to hide my embarrassing secret.
Getting through the childhood and teenage years
In a world where many debilitating and life threatening conditions exist, it may seem ridiculous to consider hyperhidrosis as a condition that can affect self esteem and an individual’s social development and identity. But it can and does, and it has certainly had a huge impact on my life. As a tactile, friendly, confident person, I had to change all my natural inclinations to disguise my hyperhidrosis for fear of discovery and the inevitable reactions of disgust and ridicule. Simple childish games and other day to day tasks required careful “coping” methods—for example, sports; turning brass door knobs (which were the only kind in my primary school); writing essays in summer; gesticulating when talking (which I do very naturally); wearing sandals; going barefoot; and shaking hands. In short, things that most people do without a thought all routinely caused me great anxiety, and I developed elaborate stories to excuse myself as there was often no way of participating and disguising my condition. If you have ever experienced revulsion as someone touches your hand or notices how damp they are, you can begin to understand how mortifying it can be when it occurs.
As a teenager, when we all want to fit in and we develop our sense of self, my body image and self esteem were damaged by my loathing of my condition and therefore of my own body. My love of dance had to be sidelined; I couldn’t take part in classes barefoot as I would slide all over the floor and leave puddles. I carried on with my singing and acting but cultivated ways to hide my hands when on stage and be apologetic to fellow actors I had to touch. Relationships were very difficult. I couldn’t hold hands, couldn’t be as tactile as I naturally am, and was frightened to become close to someone for fear they would find me revolting.
How iontophoresis has changed my life
My family has always been very supportive and reassuring; my father, having had the condition as a child, grew out of it in adulthood. They encouraged me to see our general practitioner, who was mildly sympathetic and prescribed Anhydrol Forte and other aluminium chloride products to apply topically overnight. These were helpful and did bring me some normality and relief, but they were very unpleasant to use and by no means wholly effective. When I moved to London at 22 to study at university, I thought I would make one final attempt to seek medical help and saw my new general practitioner. He was extremely helpful and suggested a referral to the Dowling Day Centre at Guy’s and St Thomas’s Hospital for iontophoresis.
The only previous option that I had found during my internet research was sympathectomy surgery, which seemed rather horrific. Iontophoresis entails the patient’s hands or feet being placed on a metal plate and gauze in two trays containing glycopyrronium bromide solution and water, or just water if preferred. The plates are connected to a machine generating varying degrees of electrical current, which is passed through the plates, effectively facilitating a circuit through the body (for example, left hand to right hand). This process is then repeated with the current flowing in the opposite direction.
Tap water does not work for me, so I need the glycopyrronium bromide solution; but I understand that tap water works for about 85% of people who use iontophoresis, and that this is the normal practice throughout the UK in many dermatology departments. If people do not get a complete cessation of sweating with tap water alone, then they are switched over to the solution.
The treatment feels different depending on the sensitivity of the individual. I am very sensitive to the electric current and the solution, and I experience most of the known side effects, such as extremely dry and sore mouth and throat and dizziness, usually up to 24 hours after treatment. I also use Vaseline on my wrists and cuticles to prevent burning. The sensation is like placing your hands on an electric fence. It is often uncomfortable and sometimes painful, although I am particularly sensitive. It is not known precisely how iontophoresis works, but it seems to be extremely effective in blocking the sweating temporarily.
Although the glycopyrronium bromide solution provides total relief in localised areas as well as the entire body, it also prevents serious physical activity for 24 hours after a treatment as it blocks the body’s ability to control temperature fully. Iontophoresis gives me relief from hyperhidrosis for about five days, with a steady decline in effects thereafter. I usually have my treatment once a week to maintain the effects.
Through the guidance, warmth, and support of the dermatology nurses, iontophoresis changed my life. It gave me, for the first time ever, total temporary relief from my hyperhidrosis. In short, I felt normal, as though a black cloud had been lifted. For the first time, I could wear sandals, enjoy a summer’s day, hold hands, touch someone on the arm, sit with my hands in my lap, enjoy formal occasions, and shake people’s hands without dread. These examples may all sound inconsequential, but they revolutionised my life.
Professionally, the improvement in my confidence for auditions and performances as a singer and actress has been immeasurable. It has been difficult, given my sensitivity and the side effects, to plan my time around my iontophoresis and arrange treatment times around concerts, rehearsals, and anything involving physical activity. However, the treatment has such positive benefits, both to my life and to my self esteem, that it makes any difficulties worth the inconvenience. Thanks to it and to the support of groups such as Hyperhidrosis UK, I can begin to see my hyperhidrosis as a condition I manage, not as a condition that manages me.
The clinician’s perspective: Click to read
1 The Hampshire Clinic, Old Basing RG24 7AL , 2 Hyperhidrosis Support Group UK, 3 London, 4 Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, Norwich NR4 7UY
Originally published: Published 7 April 2009, doi:10.1136/bmj.b1166
Cite this as: BMJ 2009;338:b1166
A Review of Klima Surefoot Spray and Kiehl’s Anti-Perspirant Cream
Posted by: · on June 25, 2010 | CommentsTwo products I have been testing are Klima Surefoot Spray and Kiehl’s Superbly Efficient Anti-Perspirant & Deodorant Cream. Hmmm… I’m sitting here trying to figure out how to describe my reaction to these products. I actually do like both, but if forced to choose between the two, I would say I prefer the Kiehl’s. I like that it is a lotion– it feels good going on and it sinks in pretty quickly. I can use it, really, everywhere I feel sweat might pop out. It is very gentle, yet I have felt a slight tingle that tells me it’s there. The tube is small and will probably not last more than a month. I would recommend the larger size– the versatility of this stuff will have you going through it more quickly than most antiperspirants.
Klima Surefoot Spray goes on wet and the package promises it will dry within 15 seconds. I do not actually feel confident walking with it on until a few minutes have passed. That’s ok; it forces me to be lying on the floor doing sit-ups
Your are advised in the directions to rub it into your toes and everywhere to ensure coverage– the bonus to doing that is that now it’s on your hands too! Double duty, though I’m sure the manufacturer would argue that you should be using the Hand Spray. I have felt no adverse side effects. I do feel as though this product has controlled several episodes during some hot days, although I have had some sweat break through while wearing it.
Do either of these antiperspirants completely eliminate sweating episodes? NO. I’m no expert on sweat patterns, but I have noticed that there seem to be three types of sweating episodes: heat-triggered, emotional, and no-reason-whatsoever. Emotionally triggered episodes as well as those episodes brought on by overheating tend to be more forceful– on my body– and sometimes the sweat can muscle right through the superficial blockages the antiperspirants provide. I’ve got Kiehl’s on right now and as I was picking up my daughter from camp, it was pretty stuffy in the school lobby and my feet did start up. However, once I got into air conditioning, it stopped and it hasn’t come back– I can feel that I do have some protection. This is pretty hard to describe! I have come to believe that especially in the summertime, some protection makes me feel better than having nothing on at all… uh, you know what I mean
You know when you are relaxed, minding your own business, and you start to sweat for no reason? (If you really have hyperhidrosis, your answer is YES) I believe that products like this– “Topical Treatments” as I call them on my site– these products can really help prevent those particular sweating episodes. This type of sweating episode usually does not produce as much sweat– for ME– so having on a topical treatment such as Kiehl’s, Klima Surefoot Spray , Med e Tate
, or even the others I discuss on my Prescription-Strength Antiperspirants page does help.
Look: these products are not a cure for Hyperhidrosis, at least for most of us. I don’t really believe there is any one thing that makes Hyperhidrosis go away– not even ETS. The best most of us can do is to try different things, usually in combinations, to manage it. Once you have the mindset that you are controlling Hyperhidrosis and Hyperhidrosis is not controlling you, life looks a whole lot better. Even in the hot, sweaty days of Summer!
Could Your Adolescent Be Suffering From Hyperhidrosis?
Posted by: · on June 2, 2010 | CommentsHere is an article I have written to give parents a “heads up” about hyperhidrosis in adolescence:
Adolescence can be an exciting, emotional, and confusing time in your child’s life as well as yours. As a parent, it can creep up on you… One day, your talkative, adoring, happy child seemingly morphs into a stranger. This stranger behaves as though you are the dullest knife in the drawer, is convinced you can’t dress to save your life, and is capable of eating every potato chip in the house in one sitting. Suddenly, everything about you is an endless source of embarrassment. You must drive in the car with all the windows up just in case your horrifying taste in music or a younger sibling’s voice causes your teenager to keel over in mortification.
All that aside, it is surreal and fascinating to see the physical changes taking place before your eyes! Everything is growing, changing, developing… there is a new game in the house: who is taller than who? Of course, along with these incredible changes usually comes an increasing self-consciousness. Self-consciousness breeds secretiveness. This is normal. You must become, by necessity, two parts detective and one part Nosy Parker. We need to stay on top of all the new dynamics in a teenager’s life, and that takes a lot of ingenuity and persistence.
One of the possible changes your adolescent may face is something that very few parents are aware of: hyperhidrosis. Hyperhidrosis, by definition, is a disorder that causes the body to sweat excessively or inappropriately. Some people develop this in early childhood (I did), but it seems that most cases of hyperhidrosis appear along with the changes brought on by puberty. There are several variations of hyperhidrosis: Axillary Hyperhidrosis (excessive underarm sweat), Palmar Hyperhidrosis (sweaty hands), Plantar Hyperhidrosis (sweaty feet), and CranioFacial Hyperhidrosis and Blushing (sweating and/or blushing of the face and scalp). The most common form of hyperhidrosis is Primary Focal Hyperhidrosis, which is a combination of sweating in the underarms, hands, and feet.
Can you imagine how difficult it would be to have this happen to your body at such a time? A teenager is already dealing with the physical changes of puberty, a new-found awareness of the opposite sex, and the emotional upheavals of hormones-gone-wild. Add to this mix the self-consciousness and secretiveness that accompany adolescence.
The upshot here is that your child could be dealing with the bewildering effects of a disorder they do not know even exists, and could be too ashamed to tell you. In fact, most people who suffer from hyperhidrosis live with it for many years without even knowing it is a medical disorder. I grew up with it and until I was in my 30′s, I thought it was “just me”.
The good news is that there are many others in the world who have this disorder– estimates are that it affects approximately 3% of the global population. Therefore, there are many treatments available, as well as chat forums and websites to be found where those who suffer from hyperhidrosis can go to find helpful information and to share their feelings and frustrations.
If your child starts to exhibit anti-social behavior, won’t allow you to hold his or her hand, sweats through their clothing, or acts depressed for no known reason, try to ask them why. Ask their permission to take them to see a specialist who can help them. For the most part, dermatologists can provide the best medical treatment for this disorder. However, not all dermatologists take hyperhidrosis seriously enough or are not experienced in its treatment. Ask before you bring your child to an appointment, because a doctor who belittles the problem can make things worse.
If you think your adolescent may be dealing with hyperhidrosis, please seek help and find out as much as you possibly can about the disorder. Above all, take it seriously. Living in a body that can “betray” you at any moment is embarrassing, scary and frustrating. Too many children suffer from this alone, in silence, believing he or she is a “freak”. It does not have to be that way.







