MediFee Healthcare

Why Do I Sweat Excessively?

Medically termed as ‘hyperhidrosis’, excessive sweating could be a medical condition more than physical inconvenience. Sweating heavily in a hot weather, warm atmosphere, circumstances involving physical exertion or during a heavy workout is normal. However, it could result due to an existing health problem in the body. It could also lead to other conditions such as fungal skin infection, eczema, etc. The good news is that it is possible to get rid of hyperhidrosis via proper treatment and medications.


Excessive Sweating

This body condition could begin from the adolescent age and continue throughout life; therefore, timely treatment is important. Axillary hyperhidrosis, i.e., sweating of the underarms and palmoplantar hyperhidrosis, i.e., sweating of the palms and feet are studied to be the typical forms of excessive sweating.

People naturally sweat differently just as the body functions vary. Sweating is not always a warning sign. It is basically a response to the change in body temperature where the body perspires to cool itself down and thus, maintain the temperature. However, some people tend to sweat heavily for no reason – even when the weather is mild or the body is not exerted. This is abnormal because excessive sweating goes beyond the natural physical requirement to sweat.

Effects

Types

It is important to know the sweating disorder type as the treatments for each one are different.

Generalized Hyperhidrosis/Secondary Hyperhidrosis

Conditions that trigger this type are:

The reason why this is called generalized is because sweating experienced all over the body – not just the hands or feet. It is found to be less common as compared to other types of excessive sweating. The main cause of this sweating disorder is usually secondary – an underlying health issue, thus it’s also known as secondary hyperhidrosis. Night or cold sweats are revealing signs in this case.

Primary Hyperhidrosis

Titled as ‘idiopathic’, this is a common form which evolves in specific body part(s) – face, scalp, palms, soles of the feet, groin, or armpits. Rightly entitled as idiopathic, which means the cause is not known, it is typically not related to a medical condition nor a sign of one. Here, excessive sweating originates from a minor misfunction of the sweat glands and nearby nerves. Note that it has symmetrical symptoms – equally occurring on both sides.

People who suffer from it are otherwise healthy. Individuals aging 25 and below could be the ones first affected by it. However, statistically, only up to 3% of the population suffer from this sweating disorder.

Home Treatments

Medicinal Treatments