Health & Medical Fitness & bodybuilding

Would the Best Treatment For Hyperhidrosis Be Dangerous?

Think about it...
the best treatment for hyperhidrosis, if it were dangerous, just wouldn't be the best then, would it? It would hardly be intelligent to consider it good.
And yet, the "best" that modern medicine seems to be able to provide are treatments which have crazy side-effects, can be painful or unpleasant, be wildly expensive, and in the end they are all only temporary fixes anyway.
So, what are some of these treatments of questionable safety? Well, there's the method of altering body/brain chemistry through the use of lab-created chemically based drugs...
anticholinergics, to be precise.
These inhibit the flow of acetylcholine, which is a neurotransmitter that spurs the sweat glands to over-produce.
The effects seem satisfactory, but are merely temporary.
The side-effects include urinary retention, blurred vision, heart palpitations and other such craziness.
This is hardly the best treatment for hyperhidrosis, if you ask me.
Of course, there is also the use of iontopheresis, which is basically electro-shock therapy.
Parts of the body are immersed in water which then has an electrical charge passed through it - the patient feels tingling, then burning and tightness, but after quite a few outlandishly expensive sessions, they can enjoy temporary relief until they go through it all again.
Now, is that crazy, or what? How about using Botox, the deadly poisonous injections of lethal botulism bacteria? Would that be the best treatment for hyperhidrosis? No thanks, not for me! Shouldn't there be a better, safer, less costly and more permanent treatment, even a cure for this? Natural remedies actually are available, for those who know where to find them.
In fact, for some of these remedies, you may even have the natural ingredients about in your house right now, perhaps in your kitchen.
Now, wouldn't that be the best treatment for hyperhidrosis?


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