Genetic study redefines a form of excessive sweating as a treatable neurological condition

medicalxpress - An international research team led by Dr. Frank Bosmans (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) has discovered a major genetic cause of hyperhidrosis (chronic and excessive sweating). The study, published in Science Advances, provides strong evidence that a genetica…

AI Summary: New research identifies a genetic basis and a tiny electrically gated ion channel in nerve cells as drivers of a form of excessive sweating, recasting it as a neurological condition rather than a benign nuisance. Findings point to potential targeted therapies that address the underlying neural mechanism rather than symptom management alone.

#pharmaceuticals #biotech #drugdevelopment #genetics #neuroscience #diagnostics

15 hrs / medicalxpress


Back to Top / Sat, July 18, 2026, 1:21 am / permalink 27231 / 2 stories in 3 hrs /




Related Stories


Genetic clues explain tagraxofusp resistance in rare leukemia (BPDCN) / 7 days

Adjuvant selpercatinib sharply cuts recurrence in RET‑fusion lung cancer / 6 wks

Single‑cycle pembrolizumab yields striking responses in dMMR colon cancer / 2 months

Drug-induced hibernation shows promise to limit stroke brain injury / 28 days

Some tumors kill neighboring healthy cells to fuel growth / 5 wks

MYC overactivity enables DNA repair and chemotherapy resistance in tumours / 2 months

Anthropic launches Claude Science to court pharma and enter drug discovery / 13 days

StackHealth RSS


You can now follow topics by RSS - browse the complete list of topics, people, and organizations. Or, try Olfaction, Public Health, Trump Administration, Health IT and look for the RSS link.





NorthFeed Inc. Terms and Conditions / Privacy Policy

Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is intended for general informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we do not guarantee the completeness or reliability of the content. Users are encouraged to verify all details independently. We accept no liability for errors, omissions, or any decisions made based on this information.