CommonFunctionalICD-10 R61

Hyperhidrosis

Excessive sweating; focal hyperhidrosis; generalised hyperhidrosis; gustatory sweating (Frey syndrome)

Hyperhidrosis is excessive sweating beyond physiological needs, affecting approximately 2–3% of the UK population. UK practice categorises it into primary focal hyperhidrosis (axillary, palmoplantar, craniofacial, single-site, bilateral, onset before 25, family history, ceases during sleep) and secondary generalised hyperhidrosis (systemic disease, malignancy, drug-induced, menopause, infection, diabetes, hyperthyroidism). New-onset generalised hyperhidrosis in an adult warrants workup for underlying cause β€” including occult malignancy (lymphoma, phaeochromocytoma, carcinoid). Treatment is stepwise β€” topical aluminium chloride, iontophoresis, botulinum toxin, oral anticholinergics, surgical sympathectomy.

CurrentLast reviewed 15 May 2026
Clinical image of Hyperhidrosis
Hyperhidrosis. Image sourced from DermNet New Zealand. Used under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. No endorsement implied.

Classification

  • Primary focal hyperhidrosis β€” focal visible excessive sweating for at least 6 months without an apparent secondary cause, plus at least two of:
    • Bilateral / symmetric distribution.
    • Onset before age 25.
    • Family history of similar hyperhidrosis.
    • Cessation during sleep.
    • Impairs activities of daily living.
    • Episodes β‰₯ 1 per week.
  • Secondary generalised hyperhidrosis β€” wide spectrum:
    • Endocrine β€” hyperthyroidism, phaeochromocytoma, carcinoid, acromegaly, menopause, diabetes.
    • Drug β€” SSRIs, opioids, cholinergics, naltrexone.
    • Infection β€” TB, malaria, brucellosis.
    • Malignancy β€” lymphoma (B symptoms), pancreatic adenocarcinoma.
    • Neurological β€” Parkinson, stroke, spinal cord injury.
    • Frey syndrome (gustatory) β€” after parotidectomy / facial trauma.

Workup

  • New-onset adult generalised hyperhidrosis β€” workup for systemic / neoplastic cause.
  • History β€” onset, distribution, triggers, drugs, fevers, weight loss, palpitations, lymphadenopathy.
  • Bloods β€” FBC, U&E, glucose, TFTs, ESR/CRP, calcium; HIV / TB screen if relevant; 24-h urinary metanephrines if phaeochromocytoma suspected.
  • CT NCAP / imaging in adult with new generalised hyperhidrosis + B-symptoms.
  • Primary focal hyperhidrosis with classical features β€” no investigation needed.

Management

  • Topical aluminium chloride hexahydrate 20% β€” first-line for axillary; nightly application for 1 week, then maintenance.
  • Glycopyrronium 1% cream / wipes β€” anticholinergic; useful for facial hyperhidrosis.
  • Iontophoresis β€” for palmoplantar; tap-water iontophoresis machine.
  • Botulinum toxin A injection β€” axillary (NICE-recommended); palmoplantar; craniofacial. 4–9 month duration.
  • Oral anticholinergics β€” propantheline, oxybutynin, glycopyrrolate; systemic side effects limit use.
  • Microwave thermolysis (miraDry) β€” for axillary; outpatient; durable.
  • Endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy β€” for severe palmar hyperhidrosis refractory to other measures; significant risk of compensatory hyperhidrosis.
  • Treat secondary cause where identified.

References

  1. Hornberger J et al. Multi-Specialty Working Group on the Recognition, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Primary Focal Hyperhidrosis. J Am Acad Dermatol; 2004.
  2. NICE Clinical Knowledge Summary. Hyperhidrosis. NICE CKS topic, accessed 18 May 2026.

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