Surgical Options For Excessive Sweating Treatment
By Kayla N. Moczo | July 1, 2009
You may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
When it is clear that other hyperhidrosis options are not providing results, you might need to consider surgical options. There are a number of surgical excessive sweating treatments out there. If you have hyperhidrosis, the best place to start would be to consult your physician.
Of those surgical treatments available, you will find those that include the removal of the sweat glands and a very specialized-and very risky-procedure called endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy or ETS. ETS is not something usually recommended by doctors, unless it is a last resort. It is considered a last resort because of the serious side effects of the procedure, such as compensatory sweating.
A surgery is termed local because it is performed at the site of the excessive sweating. Currently, there are three basic local surgical techniques: excision, curettage, and liposuction. All three are used primarily to treat extreme underarm sweating. Additionally, each of these local surgical options involves the extraction of the sweat glands. For instance, in excision, the doctor cuts out the affected glands. Curettage, on the other hand, is less about cutting that it is scraping out the sweat glands. Liposuction is easy enough to understand; in this surgery, the sweat glands are removed with suction.
As far as excessive sweating treatment is concerned, it is for good reason that skin doctors discourage ETS as a surgery option for hyperhidrosis. In ETS, the physician is trying to impede the transfer of information via nerve impulses from the spinal column to the sweat glands themselves. As a result, the surgery will effectively deactivate the signals so the sweat glands will not function.
ETS is an invasive surgery since it requires cutting into the chest via the armpit and inserting a tiny camera. Additionally, one of the lungs is collapsed to give physicians access to the proper nerve paths in order to destroy them and provide a permanent excessive sweating treatment. If ETS is performed, both sides of the body will receive the same treatment. ETS has been used mostly for the treatment of severe palm and underarm sweating.
The side effects of ETS known as compensatory sweating have been mentioned in passing. It will often appear on the face, chest, back, abdomen, legs, and even buttocks. There is a chance that this secondary sweating can be worse that the initial problem.
With the options listed, it might be a good time to think about what surgery might mean for you personally. As an excessive sweating treatment, surgery really should be the final option. Once you have gone through every other option for excessive sweating treatment including Botox injections, prescription antiperspirants, iontophoresis, and anticholinergics, you may then start looking into surgical ones.
You should talk to your doctor before you begin making choices about what sort of surgery you wish to use to treat your hyperhidrosis condition. There are real risks involved when you opt to undergo hyperhidrosis surgery. It should not be chosen lightly, especially in the case of ETS. The doctor will be able to explain the full range of options available to you so you do not make hasty decisions. Simply taking the time to research the medical process behind the surgery can help you avoid unnecessary pain or discomfort in the future.
Topics: HEALTH | No Comments »
SELF DEVELOPMENT NEWSLETTER
"Know Thyself"
Brings YOU the latest
information
To Empower You
on Your Way
To Achieve Your Core
Goals
Comments
« Brighten Up Retirement Parties With Jokes about Retirement | Home | Natural Resveratrol Sources »








