Literature DB >> 27584960

Sweat as an Efficient Natural Moisturizer.

Tetsuo Shiohara, Yohei Sato, Yurie Komatsu, Yukiko Ushigome, Yoshiko Mizukawa.   

Abstract

Although recent research on the pathogenesis of allergic skin diseases such as atopic dermatitis has focused on defects in skin genes important for maintaining skin barrier function, the fact that excreted sweat has an overwhelmingly great capacity to increase skin surface hydration and contains moisturizing factors has long been ignored: the increase in water loss induced by these gene defects could theoretically be compensated fully by a significant increase in sweating. In this review, the dogma postulating the detrimental role of sweat in these diseases has been challenged on the basis of recent findings on the physiological functions of sweat, newly recognized sweat gland-/duct-related skin diseases, and therapeutic approaches to the management of these diseases. We are now beginning to appreciate that sweat glands/ducts are a sophisticated regulatory system. Furthermore, depending on their anatomical location and the degree of the impairment, this system might have a different function: sweating responses in sweat glands/ducts located at the folds in hairy skin such as on the trunk and extremities could function as natural regulators that maintain skin hydration under quiescent basal conditions, in addition to the better-studied thermoregulatory functions, which can be mainly mediated by those at the ridges. The normal functioning of sweat could be disturbed in various inflammatory skin diseases. Thus, we should recognize sweating disturbance as an etiologic factor in the development of these diseases.
© 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27584960     DOI: 10.1159/000446756

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Probl Dermatol        ISSN: 1421-5721


  4 in total

1.  Acquired anhidrosis in a patient with Sjogren syndrome and silicone breast implants.

Authors:  Mary Beth Gadarowski; Tatsiana Pukhalskaya; Ramsay Farah; Bruce R Smoller
Journal:  JAAD Case Rep       Date:  2020-04-29

Review 2.  Physiology of sweat gland function: The roles of sweating and sweat composition in human health.

Authors:  Lindsay B Baker
Journal:  Temperature (Austin)       Date:  2019-07-17

3.  Wireless, soft electronics for rapid, multisensor measurements of hydration levels in healthy and diseased skin.

Authors:  Kyeongha Kwon; Heling Wang; Jaeman Lim; Keum San Chun; Hokyung Jang; Injae Yoo; Derek Wu; Alyssa Jie Chen; Carol Ge Gu; Lindsay Lipschultz; Jong Uk Kim; Jihye Kim; Hyoyoung Jeong; Haiwen Luan; Yoonseok Park; Chun-Ju Su; Yui Ishida; Surabhi R Madhvapathy; Akihiko Ikoma; Jean Won Kwak; Da Som Yang; Anthony Banks; Shuai Xu; Yonggang Huang; Jan-Kai Chang; John A Rogers
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-02-02       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 4.  Wearable Sweat Loss Measuring Devices: From the Role of Sweat Loss to Advanced Mechanisms and Designs.

Authors:  Bowen Zhong; Kai Jiang; Lili Wang; Guozhen Shen
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2021-10-28       Impact factor: 16.806

  4 in total

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