Search results for "Hydrosis"

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Hyperhidrosis

2009

Sweating is a physiological and vital process. The basic distinction is made between two types of sweating: thermoregulatory and emotional sweating. Most of the sweat glands are of the eccrine type. They produce a thin secretion that is hypotonic to plasma (e1). Eccrine sweat glands are distributed all over the body; their highest density is in the axillary region, on the palms of the hands, and on the soles of the feet (1). Their main function is thermoregulation. Apocrine sweat glands are found primarily in the axillae and the urogenital region. These scent glands become active during puberty and secrete a viscous fluid. They are responsible for a person’s "personal," occasionally unpleas…

medicine.medical_specialtyScent glandApocrine sweatintegumentary systemHyperhidrosisbusiness.industryPhysiologyGeneral MedicineThermoregulationBotulinum toxinSWEATHydrosisEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicinemedicine.symptombusinessHomeostasismedicine.drugDeutsches Ärzteblatt international
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