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Featured Hyperhidrosis Story: |
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Hypherhidrosis Treatments : Leesa Slater Was Sweat Free After 5 Days Using This Natural Hyperhidrosis Treatment... |
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"Lifetime Solution" |
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Before getting your book, everything I tried had little or no effect. And if it did work, it was always temporary. Where has this book been all my life???
I followed the directions you gave and it started working immediately. You were right on target. And I see why you call it a lifetime solution.
I don't dread going outside any more and I am actually looking forward to the summer. THANK YOU! |
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It will take about 75 seconds a day to never suffer from excessive sweating again.,
you don't take the risk of compensatory sweating
and it's easy to do.
You don't need to change your diet or drink some weird herbal tea that tastes like flower soil or anything like that. Do I recommend this method? I absolutely do, and in fact, because of the 60 day money back guarantee
you are completely save...
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Hyperhidrosis Treatments... |
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| There are many different treatments for hyperhidrosis available to people who suffer from excessive sweating. It's important that you familiarize yourself with the possibilities you have to treat hyperhidrosis, and realize that it really is possible nowadays to stop your excessive sweating. You don't have to accept this condition, you don't have to wear several layers of shirts on top of each other or change your shirts several times a day, which are all common ways to cope with embarrassing sweating.
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Antiperspirants
This is the most common treatment for excessive sweating. What makes most antiperspirants work is a stubstance that is called aluminum chloride. It basically "closes" the sweat gland ducts near the surface of the skin, and thus prevents you from sweating.
Another substance that is sometimes used in stronger antiperspirants is aluminum chloride hexahydrate. Drysol for example contains this specially strong kind of aluminum salt solution.
Sometimes you might notice that using antiperspirants makes your skin itchy, red, or feel burned. This is partly due to the fact that antiperspirants don't stop your body from producing the sweat, but simply preventing the sweat to come out through the pores of your skin. Antiperspirants need typically to be applied once or twice a day.

Iontophoresis
This can work for sweaty palms and sweaty feet. Usually, doctors recommend using iontophoresis after having tried prescription antiperspirants in vain. Basically, you put your hands or feet into water, and then an electrical current is sent to your skin. One session takes about 20 minutes on average, although sometimes a treatment might be a short as 15 minutes, sometimes as long as 40 minutes.
It's still not clear, why iontophoresis works, but the theory is that the mild electric shock disables the sweat glands of your skin.
To some people, iontophoresis is extremely painful, to the extent where they can't tolerate it. To others, it is acceptable. The success when using this hyperhidrosis treatments varies widely, and although there are pads that allow you to use iontophoresis for axillary hyperhidrosis, I would not advice you to use iontophoresis for anything other than sweaty hands or feet, if at all.
Another downside of iontophoresis is that you will have to keep using it, otherwise your excessive sweating will re-appear.
Sometimes the devil is in the details - many of the iontophoresis devices come with special batteries, that are only available via the manufacturer, with a hefty price tag.
(It's a bit like with Gilette - they sell you the razor cheap, but make their money with the blades. Although, the devices aren't really that cheap - around $700-$1000 to start with).
And should a manufacturer of iontophoresis devices ever go out of business, or decide to not produce it's batteries anymore, you are basically stuck with a machine you can't use anymore.
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Hyperhidrosis Treatments
When you suffer from excessive sweating, you might already have tried different things and given up hope. |
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Maybe you feel that you just have to live with it, somehow find ways to cope with this embarrassing condition and make the best out of it.
You don't need to "cope with it". You don't need to carry several shirts around, take showers all the time, be worried that you might smell bad anymore. Mike has done all that for years. He finally found a method that works and is sharing it with you know.
PLEASE send me an email - I love to hear from you :-) - Thanks!
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Hyperhidrosis Treatments (Part 2) |
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This is part 2 of the article on ways to treat hyperhidrosis. If you haven't done so yet, please read part 1 first (it's located on the left side). |
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Botox Injections
You probably know BOTOX as the stuff that is used in cosmetic surgery to get rid of wrinkles. But it is also used to stop excessive sweating.
Basically, botox is repeatedly injected into your armpits, and this prevents sweating. The way it works is that it basically "turns off" the sweat glands in the areas where it is injected.
However, it is not enough to get botox injections only once - you will need repeated injections every seven to sixteen months on average, otherwise the excessive sweating will reappear.
Oral Medication
The reason why this is a popular way to fight excessive sweating is because with oral medication, you can reduce the sweat production of ALL of your sweat glands, rather than just in one area.
Unfortunately, when you use oral medication to reduce excessive sweating, there are a lot of possible sideeffects like impaired speech, heart palpitations, problems urinating, impaired sense of taste, impaired ability to chew and swallow, a dry mouth and constipation.
The most common kinds of drugs used to reduce sweating are anticholinergics, beta blockers and clonidine hyprochlorides.
Surgery
When you have tried all kinds of hyperhidrosis remedies and are still suffering from excessive sweating, you might consider surgery for hyperhidrosis. The most common kind is called ETS - endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy.
However - ETS is a major operation, with serious risks attached. If you receive and ETS, you will be put in general anesthesia and your lungs will be collapsed, then the surgeon will permanently destroy the nerve paths that are are connected to the sweat glands that cause excessive sweating.
Maybe you think that because this is such a major operation with risks attached to it, it is particularly effective. However, you should be aware of the fact that compensatory sweating is quiet common with people who had ETS. A study from the Medical City Hospital in Dallas showed that more than 80% of the people who underwent ETS later suffered from compensatory sweating. Another study from Denmark lead to even worse results - about 90% of the people who underwent ETS for axillary hyperhidrosis later suffered from compulsory sweating.
What Is Compensatory Sweating?
This is excessive sweating, that appears on another part of your body. For example, originally your problem might have been excessive armpit sweat, or excessive sweating of the hands. You then received ETS surgery. Afterwards, your excessive armpit sweating is gone - but instead, you now sweat excessively on the back or another part of your body. (Common areas of compensatory sweating are the bck, the chest, the abdomen, the legs, the buttocks and the face).
What's more - the compensatory sweating in any of these areas can actually be worse than the axillary sweating for which you received the ETS surgery in the first place.
Another form of surgery for excessive sweating are local procedures. Rather than destroying the nerve paths that go from the spine to the body, local hyperhidrosis surgery basically gets rid of the sweat glands in only the area where the operation is performed. There are three frosm of local surgery: liposuction, where the sweat glands are being removed by suction, excision, where they are cut out from your tissue and curettage, where the sweat glands are scraped out from your body tissue.
Some of the negative side effects of surgery to stop sweating may only emergy a couple of years after the original surgery. So even if directly after the surgery your condition seems to have improved, it might later worsen dramatically.
These are the most common treatments for excessive sweating. Surprisingly, there are natural, noninvasive hyperhidrosis treatments that can help you to get rid of excessive sweating within less than a month. Not only are they less risky, but they also are a lot more affordable.
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