Excessive Sweating: Causes & Treatment Options in South London

50 clinics offering treatments • 4.9 avg rating (239 reviews) • 33 accredited • Within 50 miles

Expert guide to causes & treatments

excessive sweating treatment in South London is the clearest example of a concern that sits on the boundary between aesthetic and medical practice. Among the 50 verified clinics in South London offering hyperhidrosis treatment, the standard approach for moderate to severe underarm sweating is botulinum toxin injected in a grid pattern across the affected area. Under UK MHRA regulation, botulinum toxin is a prescription-only medicine and can only be prescribed by an independent prescriber (doctor, dentist, or appropriately qualified nurse or pharmacist prescriber) following a face-to-face consultation before administration. Hyperhidrosis is recognised as a medical indication rather than a purely cosmetic one, which means secondary or generalised sweating should be reviewed by a GP first to rule out an underlying cause. Licensed UK products for botulinum toxin include Botox (which holds a specific licence for severe primary axillary hyperhidrosis), alongside Azzalure and Bocouture. A thorough excessive sweating consultation in South London takes a full history, rules out secondary causes, discusses expected duration of effect, and plans for maintenance sessions roughly every six to nine months. Clinicians registered with the GMC, NMC or HCPC and, where possible, accredited by Save Face or the JCCP, offer a useful baseline of practice quality. The 50 clinics listed have been verified against these standards.

What are excessive sweating?

Excessive sweating, clinically known as hyperhidrosis, is the production of sweat beyond the amount needed for normal thermoregulation. It can be localised to one or more specific areas (focal hyperhidrosis, most often affecting the underarms, palms, soles or scalp) or it can be generalised across the body (secondary hyperhidrosis, usually linked to an underlying medical cause). Focal hyperhidrosis most commonly begins during adolescence or early adulthood, affects roughly one to three percent of the population, and often runs in families. Generalised hyperhidrosis may appear at any age and is frequently associated with thyroid disease, diabetes, certain medications, menopause, infection or, less commonly, underlying malignancy.

The impact on quality of life is often underestimated. Adults with untreated axillary (underarm) or palmar hyperhidrosis describe practical and social consequences, from ruined shirts and anxiety around handshakes to genuine occupational difficulties in professions involving physical dexterity or public presentation. The condition is not simply a cosmetic nuisance. Sweat glands receive their instructions from the sympathetic nervous system, and the overactivity seen in primary hyperhidrosis reflects neural signalling rather than any problem with the sweat glands themselves.

Aesthetic and medical treatment options vary by severity. First-line treatment for mild focal hyperhidrosis is typically topical, using aluminium chloride-based antiperspirants at clinical strength. For moderate to severe focal hyperhidrosis that has not responded to topical treatment, dedicated hyperhidrosis treatment with botulinum toxin is the standard next step. Small quantities of toxin are injected in a grid pattern across the affected area (most commonly the underarms), blocking acetylcholine release at the sympathetic nerve terminals that stimulate the sweat glands. The effect develops over one to two weeks and typically lasts six to nine months, sometimes longer with repeat treatment. The procedure is well-tolerated, though palmar and plantar treatment requires nerve block or ice-based anaesthesia because the thicker skin is more sensitive. For persistent, severe cases that fail both topical and injectable approaches, microwave thermolysis devices, iontophoresis (for palms and soles) and, rarely, surgical sympathectomy can be considered, usually through a specialist dermatology service rather than a high-street aesthetic clinic.

Hyperhidrosis in the UK is recognised as a medical condition rather than a purely cosmetic concern, which means treatment can sometimes be accessed on the NHS where the impact on function is sufficient. Generalised hyperhidrosis or recent onset of excessive sweating in an adult should always prompt a GP review before any aesthetic treatment, because an underlying medical cause must be excluded first.

Treatment Options in South London

Clinics in South London

50 verified clinics in South London offer treatments for excessive sweating. Across 239 patient reviews, clinics average 4.9 stars. 33 clinics hold professional accreditations.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is hyperhidrosis?

Hyperhidrosis is a medical condition causing excessive sweating that is not proportional to heat or physical activity. Primary hyperhidrosis (no underlying cause) affects 1-3% of the population and typically begins in adolescence. It can occur in specific areas (focal) or all over (generalised).

How do anti-wrinkle injections treat sweating?

The same product used for wrinkles can be injected into the skin to block the nerve signals that activate sweat glands. The treatment is particularly effective for underarm sweating, with 82-87% reduction in sweat production typically achieved.

How long do the results last?

Anti-wrinkle injections for sweating typically last 4-12 months, with an average of 7-8 months. Many patients find results last longer with repeat treatments as the sweat glands become less active over time.

Is the treatment painful?

The underarm treatment involves multiple small injections across the treatment area. Numbing cream is applied beforehand, and most patients describe mild discomfort rather than pain. The entire procedure takes about 20-30 minutes.

Can excessive sweating be cured?

While hyperhidrosis cannot be permanently cured, it can be very effectively managed. Anti-wrinkle injections provide the most reliable non-surgical results. Prescription antiperspirants, iontophoresis, and lifestyle modifications can also help between treatments.

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