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When it’s hot outside, everyone sweats a lot.
Most people expect to break a sweat when they exercise, but imagine
sweating profusely even in the middle of winter when you’re not even
exerting yourself. Some people suffer from excessive sweating nearly
all the time. Their hands and feet sweat so much that many of these
individuals dread socializing and may even have difficulty getting
some jobs.
Vidal Maldonado was one of those people. He’d lived with excessive
sweat no matter what he was doing. The 19-year-old's hands were almost
always very cold and extremely wet. Maldonado suffered from a chronic
condition known as hyperhidrosis.
Hyperhidrosis, or excessively sweaty
hands, affects a large number of people. The disease is
debilitating enough that many adolescents refuse to go out on dates.
They have difficulty competing and achieving when they do written
tests at school because when they become anxious their hands sweat to
such an extent that the sweat literally drips off their hands. In
addition, their hands are cold and clammy and they are very
self-conscious about putting their hands out and shaking hands with
anyone or touching anyone.
Maldonado knows how debilitating
emotionally and socially hyperhidrosis can be. He avoided meeting new
people and making new friends because he feared being ridiculed. “It
affected my life in many ways,” he said. “I avoided handshakes. I
didn’t really like to come into contact with many people, even like
just friends, guys or girls, because I knew they’d expect a handshake
and I didn’t want to shake their hand because I felt they would
ridicule me. It was difficult to even write on paper because the
paper would get all wet.”
In the past, there was little that
could be done to help, but that is not the case any more. In fact, a
high tech surgical procedure can offer almost immediate relief. Most
of the time, these very unfortunate people are told to tough it out,
to dry their hands or to use powders or some sort of talc to alleviate
the problem, but these don’t work. The fact is there is a simple
surgical solution. It is a relatively low-risk operation and it cures
the problem. Yet, for some reason this very simple surgical treatment
is relatively unknown in Oklahoma.
It was word of that surgical fix that
led Maldonado to our office and soon after into the operating room at
OU Medical Center for a procedure he hoped would at last bring him
relief.
The operation to treat hyperhidrosis focuses on the system of nerves
in the body known as the sympathetic chain. The sympathetic nervous
system is responsible for shunting blood away from your skin to your
vital organs to allow you to take care of an emergency like running
away or fighting for your life. When that happens, the hands become
cold and excrete an enormous amount of perspiration. In people with
hyperhidrosis, the sympathetic nervous system is overactive, producing
this response often.
The surgery involves excising a small
portion of the sympathetic chain, which lies on the inside of the
chest on either side of the spine. The procedure is done through
three tiny incisions. A small scope is introduced through one incision
and surgical instruments through the other two incisions. Using the
scope, the sympathetic nerve chain can be easily identified. Once
identified, a small area of the chain is removed. The process is then
repeated on the other side. The entire process takes about an hour
and a half.
The risk of the operation is very
low. Complications are very rare, but the relief to the patient is
immediate and astonishing. “The patients when they are put to sleep
with the anesthesia, go to sleep with cold, wet hands and feet; and
when they wake up from anesthesia, they have warm dry hands. It is a
very moving sight to see them respond. The first thing they do is
they touch their hands. They can’t believe that their hands feel warm
and dry for the first time in their lives.”
The surgical treatment of
hyperhidrosis is typically done on an outpatient basis, and there is
usually little discomfort following the surgery.
For Maldonado, the procedure brought
not only warm, dry hands at long last, but a brand new confidence and
an end to his long-held fears and embarrassment.”
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