• sometimes called merocrine glands as their type of secretion is merocrine, are the major sweat glands of the human body. (wikipedia.org)
  • Of two family members tested, both had a marked decrease in palmar sweat secretion during administration of diltiazem, a calciumchannel blocker. (jamanetwork.com)
  • Sweat secretion, a constitutive feature, is directly involved in thermoregulation and metabolism, and is regulated by both the central nervous system (CNS) and autonomic nervous system (ANS). (nih.gov)
  • To explore how sweat secretion is controlled by both the CNS and the ANS and the mechanisms behind the neural control of sweat secretion. (nih.gov)
  • Acetylcholine acts as a potent stimulator for sweat secretion, which is released by sympathetic nerves. (nih.gov)
  • β-adrenoceptors are found in adipocytes as well as apocrine glands, and these receptors may mediate lipid secretion from apocrine glands for sweat secretion. (nih.gov)
  • The activation of β-adrenoceptors could increase sweat secretion through opening of Ca 2+ channels to elevate intracellular Ca 2+ concentration. (nih.gov)
  • Ca 2+ and cyclic adenosine monophosphate play a part in the secretion of lipids and proteins from apocrine glands for sweat secretion. (nih.gov)
  • The translocation of aquaporin 5 plays an important role in sweat secretion from eccrine glands. (nih.gov)
  • Because respiratory water loss contributes little to evaporative cooling in warm or hot environments, cooling must come primarily from cutaneous sweat secretion. (nih.gov)
  • Secretion of sweat by eccrine glands in the skin. (britannica.com)
  • Although the histological features of apocrine and eccrine poromas are nearly identical, the presence of homogenous eosinophilic intraluminal secretion, lining cells with intensely eosinophilic cytoplasm, and small clusters of sebaceous cells surrounded by poroid cells is suggestive of apocrine lineage. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • [ 3 ] Eccrine glands produce sweat, and an alteration in the rate of sweat secretion manifests as hypohidrosis or hyperhidrosis. (medscape.com)
  • It is the excessive secretion of the eccrine sweat glands in response to stimuli like heat. (hpathy.com)
  • Sandalwood makes your skin dry and reduces sweat secretion of glands. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • Excessive sweating occurs without such triggers. (medlineplus.gov)
  • When excessive sweating affects the hands, feet, and armpits, it is called focal hyperhidrosis. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Antiperspirants -- Excessive sweating may be controlled with strong antiperspirants, which plug the sweat ducts. (medlineplus.gov)
  • These are prescribed for certain types of hyperhidrosis such as excessive sweating of the face. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Do any of your blood relatives have excessive sweating? (aad.org)
  • When did you first notice the excessive sweating? (aad.org)
  • Hyperhidrosis is defined as abnormally excessive sweating involving the extremities, underarms and face, usually unrelated to body temperature or exercise. (hpathy.com)
  • The main mechanism behind primary hyperhidrosis is the excessive stimulation of the sweat centres of the hypothalamus in response to emotion leading to increased secretory activity of the eccrine sweat glands of the palms and soles. (hpathy.com)
  • But if you've ever experienced excessive sweat then you've probably wondered how to stop sweating , or at least keep it in check. (harcourthealth.com)
  • The most common place a person is likely to experience excessive sweating is the armpits. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Stinky feet could be a sign of excessive sweating and bacteria build up. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Areas of the face have an amazing amount of hair follicles and eccrine sweat glands, which means excessive sweating is possible. (harcourthealth.com)
  • It's important to keep an eye on excessive sweating no matter where it occurs. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Excessive sweating can also be a symptom of an underlying medical condition that needs to be evaluated by a medical professional. (harcourthealth.com)
  • If you suffer from excessive sweating, chances are, you suffer every day. (sweathelp.org)
  • In addition to psychological troubles, excessive sweating can also cause painful or irritating skin problems, such as bacterial or fungal overgrowth, infections, and disintegration (also called maceration) of the skin. (sweathelp.org)
  • Print out the following questions and use them to keep track of how excessive sweating manifests itself in your life and how sweat impairs your daily activities. (sweathelp.org)
  • Do you ever change your social plans due to excessive sweating or fear of excessive sweating? (sweathelp.org)
  • Does excessive sweating affect your school or work performance or career choices? (sweathelp.org)
  • Have you experienced skin irritation or infections due to excessive sweating or your attempts to manage excessive sweating? (sweathelp.org)
  • Have you ever lost friends or a job due to excessive sweating? (sweathelp.org)
  • While it's important to document how excessive sweating impacts the quality of your life, it's also key to understand that there are two main types of hyperhidrosis--primary focal and secondary generalized --and your next step is to learn the difference so you can move forward in finding relief. (sweathelp.org)
  • C essation during sleep - Primary hyperhidrosis does not cause excessive sweating during sleep. (sweathelp.org)
  • D uration - For a primary Hh diagnosis, excessive sweating symptoms or episodes that have been going on for 6+ months with 2+ episodes per week are considered. (sweathelp.org)
  • Apply this chilled cucumber juice on your body with the help of a cotton ball to get rid of excessive sweating. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • If your feet are prone to excessive sweating, it's important to buy breathable shoes made of natural materials like leather or canvas," Dr. Ward says. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Sometimes these Na+ ion concentrations can greatly increase (up to 180 mmol/L). In people who have hyperhidrosis, the sweat glands (eccrine glands in particular) overreact to stimuli and are just generally overactive, producing more sweat than normal. (wikipedia.org)
  • Dysfunction of the ANS, especially the sympathetic nervous system, may cause sweating disorders, such as hypohidrosis and hyperhidrosis. (nih.gov)
  • Hyperhidrosis is a medical condition in which a person sweats excessively and unpredictably. (medlineplus.gov)
  • People with hyperhidrosis may sweat even when the temperature is cool or when they are at rest. (medlineplus.gov)
  • People with hyperhidrosis appear to have overactive sweat glands. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Sweating that is not caused by another disease is called primary hyperhidrosis. (medlineplus.gov)
  • If the sweating occurs as a result of another medical condition, it is called secondary hyperhidrosis. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The primary symptom of hyperhidrosis is sweating. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Many people who sweat excessively do not realize that they have a treatable medical condition called hyperhidrosis. (aad.org)
  • From physical discomfort to anxiety, embarrassment, and the stress of always hiding your sweat from others, hyperhidrosis can impact nearly all aspects of your life. (sweathelp.org)
  • If the sweating is problematic both day and night, a combination of primary and secondary hyperhidrosis is possible. (sweathelp.org)
  • If you feel like you sweat more than normal amounts and nothing seems to help, you may have a condition called hyperhidrosis . (clevelandclinic.org)
  • perspiration , in most mammals, water given off by the intact skin, either as vapour by simple evaporation from the epidermis ( insensible perspiration) or as sweat , a form of cooling in which liquid actively secreted from sweat glands evaporates from the body surface. (britannica.com)
  • A flexible battery that runs off of perspiration and can discharge 20 hours' worth of electricity for low-powered wearables from just 2ml of sweat has been developed. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The absorbent properties of the textile mean that it can retain sweat, providing the battery with a constant supply even when the wearer's perspiration rate varies. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The patch provides an unambiguous digital result that can be read in an electrochromic display and yields 95% sensitivity and 100% specificity when tested with artificial eccrine perspiration samples. (nature.com)
  • Sweating is the body's built-in mechanism for keeping cool, but some experts believe that, because it opens up and unclogs the pores, perspiration is also a secret weapon for keeping our skin looking its best. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Eccrine glands trigger perspiration to keep our core temperature regulated, while apocrine glands release sweat as a response to nerves or stimulation, such as exercise. (howstuffworks.com)
  • So maybe the answer to whether sweat is your skin's friend or foe isn't a simple one, but at least now you know a trick to keep it on your side: Let perspiration take its natural course, but once it's made its way to the surface, make sure to follow up immediately with proper cleaning and care . (howstuffworks.com)
  • The odor from sweat is due to bacterial activity on the secretions of the apocrine sweat glands, a distinctly different type of sweat gland found in human skin. (wikipedia.org)
  • Note: Deodorants do not prevent sweating but are helpful in reducing body odor. (medlineplus.gov)
  • If you are trying to reduce the odor you produce, Preti says that deodorants and antiperspirants do a decent job (deodorants mask the smell with a fragrance while antiperspirants reduce the amount of sweat). (popsci.com)
  • Sweat itself has no odor, but when bacteria on the skin and hair metabolize the proteins and fatty acids, they produce an unpleasant odor. (roofingcontractor.com)
  • Deodorants mask or stop body odor, but allow you to sweat. (aad.org)
  • The sweat produced may be acted upon by bacteria, causing a noticeable odor. (coursehero.com)
  • The type of sweat gland that is least responsible for thermoregulation and most responsible for body odor. (coursehero.com)
  • It's long been known that some mosquitoes are tiny human-seeking missiles, homing in on the odor of our sweat. (livescience.com)
  • A shower can provide relief and help eliminate any odor that may result from groin sweat. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Body odor or pungent smell of the body occurs when sweat glands secrete too much. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • Dirt and sand get stuck on that sweat and gives birth of the bacteria and fungus and create bad odor on your body. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • You might not realize it, but sweat alone has no odor. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Why does sweat create body odor? (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Eccrine glands are innervated only by the sympathetic nervous system. (wikipedia.org)
  • When the body temperature rises, the sympathetic nervous system stimulates the eccrine sweat glands to secrete water to the skin surface, where it cools the body by evaporation. (britannica.com)
  • There are two types of glands involved in sweating: eccrine and apocrine. (howstuffworks.com)
  • It turns out, there are two types of sweat that come out of two different types of glands during these different times. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • The axillae (underarms) are the site of the greatest concentration of apocrine sweat glands. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Cases of apocrine chromhidrosis typically involve a smaller amount of sweat, and it tends to appear around the nipples and underarms. (howstuffworks.com)
  • You may have lost friends and opportunities because of extremely sweaty palms , slippery sweaty feet , sweating on your face , or uncontrollable sweating underarms . (sweathelp.org)
  • The duct of eccrine gland is formed by two layers of cuboidal epithelial cells. (wikipedia.org)
  • They consist of a coiled duct made from cells at the base which produce the sweat and then a straighter duct that reabsorbs some of the salt before the sweat reaches the surface of the skin. (thenakedscientists.com)
  • Poroma is a benign adnexal neoplasm of the intraepidermal portion of the sweat gland duct, called the acrosyringium . (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • The Na+ ions are re-absorbed into the tissue via the epithelial sodium channels (ENaCs) that are located on the apical membrane of the cells that form the eccrine gland ducts (see Fig. 9 and Fig. 10 of the reference). (wikipedia.org)
  • But in these cases, the problem is in the CFTR chloride transporter that is also located on the apical membrane of eccrine gland ducts. (wikipedia.org)
  • Miliaria is a common skin disease caused by blockage and/or inflammation of eccrine sweat ducts. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Miliaria crystallina shows vesicles associated with the sweat ducts within or just under the stratum corneum of the epidermis. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Eccrine sweat glands are found in virtually all skin, with the highest density in the palms of the hands, and soles of the feet, and on the head, but much less on the torso and the extremities. (wikipedia.org)
  • Eccrine chromhidrosis may turn up on the palms or soles of the feet. (howstuffworks.com)
  • The exocrine glands of the integumentary system produce sweat, oil, and wax to cool, protect, and moisturize the skin's surface. (innerbody.com)
  • Eccrine glands, found all over the body, produce sweat to regulate temperature, but this sweat is mostly water with trace amounts of salt and other compounds. (livescience.com)
  • The uncontrollable sweating can lead to significant discomfort, both physical and emotional. (medlineplus.gov)
  • E pisodes - Extreme, uncontrollable sweating will likely not be continuous or constant if you have primary Hh. (sweathelp.org)
  • In extreme conditions, human beings may excrete several litres of such sweat in an hour. (britannica.com)
  • Chromhidrosis is an extremely rare condition that causes a person to excrete colored sweat. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Eccrine glands , found in their highest concentrations on the forehead, palms and soles, excrete mostly water and salts. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Apocrine glands excrete sweat that contains water, fats, byproducts of metabolic processes and wastes. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Patients with eccrine chromhidrosis may excrete any color of sweat (as we'll see in a moment) and typically in large amounts. (howstuffworks.com)
  • She says bacteria eat organic particles in your sweat and excrete digestive gas, and "what you smell is bacterial flatulence. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Lipofuscin can be produced in the apocrine glands, and when it occurs in high enough concentration, it can color the sweat that's excreted by these glands. (howstuffworks.com)
  • More commonly known as prickly rash or heat rash, miliaria occurs when the eccrine glands become blocked, which results in a series of red bumps. (howstuffworks.com)
  • [ 4 ] A marked increase in sweat production on the nose occurs in granulosis rubra nasi. (medscape.com)
  • Eccrine glands are active in thermoregulation by providing cooling from water evaporation of sweat secreted by the glands on the body surface and emotionally induced sweating (anxiety, fear, stress, and pain). (wikipedia.org)
  • The white sediment in otherwise colorless eccrine secretions is caused by evaporation that increases the concentration of salts. (wikipedia.org)
  • That's because the sweat you produce as a result of an anxious moment contains more apocrine secretions, which are the ones that contain those smell-inducing proteins. (popsci.com)
  • Lack of sweating is called anhidrosis or hypohyrosis, says Eric Ascher, DO , a family physician with Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. (livestrong.com)
  • Miliaria profunda (tropical anhidrosis ) is the result of sweat leaking from the sweat glands into the middle layer of skin (blockage at or below the dermoepidermal junction) following repeated episodes of miliaria rubra. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Anhidrosis is a medical condition where you are unable to sweat normally. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • During periods of activity, sweat glands produce pressures associated with osmotic effects to drive liquid to the surface of the skin. (rsc.org)
  • This paper introduces a thin, soft wearable microfluidic system that mounts onto the surface of the skin to enable precise and routine measurements of secretory fluidic pressures generated at the surface of the skin by eccrine sweat glands (surface SPSG, or s-SPSG) at nearly any location on the body. (rsc.org)
  • These platforms incorporate an arrayed collection of unit cells each of which includes an opening to the skin, an inlet through which sweat can flow, a capillary bursting valve (CBV) with a unique bursting pressure (BP), a corresponding microreservoir to receive sweat and an outlet to the surrounding ambient to allow release of backpressure. (rsc.org)
  • This is essential, as the rate at which human skin sweats varies depending not only on bodily location and environmental conditions but also on the time of day. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • Physicians harvested sweat from her sebum (the natural oils that waterproof and moisturize our skin and hair) using ether to separate the sweat from the rest of the materials. (howstuffworks.com)
  • The classic case most often cited is the blue sweat found on copper miners -- the mineral mixes with the sweat on the skin, causing the pigmentation. (howstuffworks.com)
  • A self-powered skin patch for the measurement of sweat conductivity is presented. (nature.com)
  • In this paper, we present a self-powered skin patch to measure sweat conductivity and its application to screening cystic fibrosis with a novel and simple approach. (nature.com)
  • People typically have 2.6 million sweat glands distributed within their skin. (roofingcontractor.com)
  • Sweat glands are located deep within the skin and primarily regulate temperature. (coursehero.com)
  • The major sweat glands of the human body, found in virtually all skin, produce a clear, odorless substance, consisting primarily of water and NaCl. (coursehero.com)
  • Is sweating good for your skin? (howstuffworks.com)
  • Despite its sodium content, sweat can't quite serve as a cheap alternative to a fancy, exfoliating salt scrub, but it does offer some other salon-quality benefits to your skin. (howstuffworks.com)
  • For one thing, the process of perspiring itself causes your pores to open up as the sweat makes its way through layers of skin to the surface. (howstuffworks.com)
  • For more information on sweat and skin care, check out the links on the following page. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Understanding how skin microbes match up with mosquito meal preferences could help researchers to pinpoint important chemical components of sweat scents, they wrote. (livescience.com)
  • It wasn't that the sweat glands were less active in older people, rather, that the environment in the aging skin had been slowly degraded, making the skin structures less able to support the new cells that were generated. (eurekalert.org)
  • Chronic sun exposure is an important factor that damages skin structures that normally support sweat glands. (eurekalert.org)
  • The sweat on your skin evaporating is what cools down your body. (livestrong.com)
  • Resolution of miliaria requires minimising heat and humidity to reduce sweating and the avoidance of irritation to the skin. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Controlling scalp sweat can be difficult since it's hard to apply products directly to the skin. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Normal amounts of bacteria on your skin interact with common sweat to create your personal scent. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Primary malignant neoplasms of the sweat glands are rare, constituting less than 1% of all primary malignant skin lesions 1 . (bvsalud.org)
  • In other words, sweating causes the loss of body heat and thus cools us down on a hot day or when performing strenuous exercise. (coursehero.com)
  • The sympathetic cholinergic fibers connecting with the sweat glands discharge primarily by changes in deep body temperature (core temperature). (wikipedia.org)
  • Sweating helps the body stay cool. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The sweating may be all over the body (generalized) or it may be in one area (focal). (medlineplus.gov)
  • The human body has two types of sweat glands: eccrine and apocrine. (popsci.com)
  • But certain foods can still make you smell worse: if pungent foods contain fat-soluble compounds that dissolve in your body fat, they'll often get released in your sweat. (popsci.com)
  • But what exactly is this strange condition of chromhidrosis, where colored sweat is actually produced within the body? (howstuffworks.com)
  • Therefore, sweat does not evaporate and cool your body as efficiently as when the air is dry. (roofingcontractor.com)
  • Sweat glands, also known as sudoriferous glands, are distributed over most of the body surface. (coursehero.com)
  • Sweat glands, also called sudoriferous glands, are simple tubular glands found almost everywhere on our body. (coursehero.com)
  • These are the true sweat glands in the sense of helping to regulate body temperature. (coursehero.com)
  • These glands, unlike the eccrine glands, serve virtually no role in the regulation of body temperature. (coursehero.com)
  • Your best bet for keeping your pores clean and unclogged is to always wash your face and body as soon as possible after sweating. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Eccrine glands are the most abundant sweat glands on the human body , setting people apart from most other mammals. (livescience.com)
  • Dogs, for example, pant to regulate their body temperature, because their eccrine glands are limited mostly to the bottoms of their paws. (livescience.com)
  • The researchers had already determined eccrine sweat glands, which are located throughout the body, are important for wound closure. (eurekalert.org)
  • Without sweating, your body cannot reach a stable temperature and has the potential to overheat,' explains Dr. Ascher. (livestrong.com)
  • Let's take a look at which areas of the body sweat the most and the causes behind it. (harcourthealth.com)
  • The body has 2-4 million sweat glands . (harcourthealth.com)
  • Surprisingly, the most concentrated area of sweat glands on the body is the soles of feet. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Eccrine glands secrete sweating that has no bad smell and it helps to keep your body cool. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • Sweat accumulates on your body and old sweat becomes sticky. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • Rosewater helps to keep your body cool, reduces sweating and sweet fragrance of rose water keeps you refreshed all day long. (ayurvediccure.com)
  • Everyone has sweat glands, and they're all over your body. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Eccrine glands are sympathetically innervated, distributed over the entire body, and active from birth. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Human eccrine sweat is essentially a dilute sodium chloride solution with trace amounts of other plasma electrolytes. (britannica.com)
  • Medicines -- Use of some medicines may prevent stimulation of sweat glands. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Recently, this device has been applied to cystic fibrosis monitoring, in which the wearable platform enables both sweat stimulation and chloride ions detection 12 . (nature.com)
  • Key technological developments to date include continuous glucose monitors, which use an indwelling sensor needle to measure glucose in interstitial fluid, and device-integrated sweat stimulation for continuous access to analytes in sweat. (nature.com)
  • Fig. 6: Sweat stimulation approaches. (nature.com)
  • The proteins make sweat thicker, and as it breaks down it mixes with bacteria. (harcourthealth.com)
  • If that's not enough to make you run for the shower, consider this: When stress-induced apocrine sweat comes into contact with even normal amounts of bacteria, it can stink even worse. (clevelandclinic.org)
  • Products containing 10% to 20% aluminum chloride hexahydrate are the first line of treatment for underarm sweating. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Botulinum toxin -- Botulinum toxin is used to treat severe underarm, palmar (hand), and plantar (foot) sweating. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Botulinum toxin injected into the underarm temporarily blocks the nerves that stimulate sweating. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Apocrine sweat glands are mostly confined to the underarm area. (roofingcontractor.com)
  • Sweat from the apocrine glands contain proteins and fatty acids, making it thicker and yellowish in color (hence those underarm stains). (roofingcontractor.com)
  • In other words, palms are most likely to sweat when you feel stressed, nervous or embarrassed. (harcourthealth.com)
  • These important findings could not have been revealed in animal studies because laboratory animals don't have sweat glands, they don't sweat like we do," notes senior author Gary Fisher, Ph.D., Harry Helfman Professor of Molecular Dermatology in the U-M Department of Dermatology. (eurekalert.org)
  • Amount of exertion directly effects metabolic rate, heart rate, heat generation and amount of sweat generated,' says Heidi Prather, MD , a board-certified dermatologist with Westlake Dermatology in Austin, Texas. (livestrong.com)
  • Treatments abound for excess sweat: Clinical-strength antiperspirant, Botox, surgery are among treatment options. (howstuffworks.com)
  • You can also use antiperspirant towelette to control sweating for up 4-7 days. (harcourthealth.com)
  • Humans have 4 million exocrine sweat glands, which can be classified into two types: eccrine and apocrine glands. (nih.gov)
  • Sweat glands, although found in the majority of mammals, constitute the primary means of heat dissipation only in certain hoofed animals (orders Artiodactyla and Perissodactyla) and in primates, including humans. (britannica.com)
  • Humans tune out the smells we smell all the time, but when you're hit with a spike in smelly sweat, you're likely to imagine it's worse than it is-because your nose has a front row seat. (popsci.com)
  • Humans have two types of sweat glands on our bodies. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Our abundance of eccrine glands and relative lack of apocrine glands makes humans, in a word, weird. (livescience.com)
  • Triggers -- Does the sweating occur when you are reminded of something that upsets you (such as a traumatic event)? (medlineplus.gov)
  • To diagnose eccrine chromhidrosis (which is rarer than the apocrine variety), a patient history is a physician's best tool. (howstuffworks.com)
  • The forehead and upper lip are where you're most likely to see beads of sweat pop up on the face. (harcourthealth.com)
  • A simple quantitative palmar sweat test was used to objectively confirm historical data. (jamanetwork.com)
  • It becomes more problematic when the sweat is brown or black because, although the sweat is colored by lipofuscins, they've been highly oxidized when they reach that pigment and don't fluoresce under a black light. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Granulosis rubra nasi is described as a benign, autosomal dominant familial disease of children involving the eccrine glands of the nose, cheeks, and chin. (medscape.com)
  • In a person unused to heavy sweating, the loss of sodium chloride during a period of heavy labour or high temperatures may be great ( see sodium deficiency ), but the efficiency of the gland increases with use, and in acclimatized persons the salt loss is decreased. (britannica.com)
  • When the silver flakes are exposed to sweat they are driven to clump together by both their acidity and chloride ions - increasing their ability to conduct electricity. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetic autosomal recessive disease that induces mutations on a conductance transmembrane regulator protein-cystic fibrosis conductance transmembrane regulator (CFTR)-which controls the excretion of chloride in sweat. (nature.com)
  • For this reason, patients with CF present higher chloride contents in sweat than healthy subjects. (nature.com)
  • Sweat consists primarily of water, as well as concentrations of sodium and chloride, and to a lesser extent, potassium. (howstuffworks.com)
  • The suspected diagnosis of cystic fibrosis was confirmed with a sweat chloride level of 120 mmol/L and homo-zygozity for the Delta F 508 gene on genetic studies. (who.int)
  • After being lost to follow-up for number of mutations affecting the in the sweat and the urine, resulting in several years, he was seen again at the chloride channel, the commonest being hypokalaemia [ 3,8-14 ]. (who.int)
  • Similarly, people with cystic fibrosis also produce salty sweat. (wikipedia.org)
  • The device presented in this paper takes advantage of this new measurement method to develop a sweat patch for screening cystic fibrosis that operates with an extremely simple electronic circuit that minimizes its cost and environmental impact. (nature.com)
  • In addition to the aforementioned ingredients, sweat from apocrine glands may contain proteins and fatty acids. (howstuffworks.com)
  • 1 First described in 1956, poroma was originally identified as a tumor originating from the eccrine sweat gland. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • This study aimed to report and discuss the challenging differential diagnosis between a primary tumor of sweat glands and cutaneous metastasis of mammary carcinoma using anatomopathological and imaging diagnostic resources available today. (bvsalud.org)
  • The findings show the challenge in differentiating a primary tumor of the sweat gland from a metastatic cutaneous tumor of mammary carcinoma, even with the immunohistochemical resources currently available. (bvsalud.org)
  • Sweat associated with vigorous exercise have s-SPSGs that are somewhat higher than those associated with sedentary activity. (rsc.org)
  • On the opposite spectrum, you may notice you don't seem to sweat, even after vigorous exercise. (clevelandclinic.org)