Botox for hyperhidrosis: FDA-approved excessive sweating treatment
Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) was FDA-approved in 2004 for severe underarm sweating, reducing sweat production by 82–87%.
Neuromodulators, dermal fillers, biostimulators, and the longevity question. Label-first, comparison-shaped.
Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) was FDA-approved in 2004 for severe underarm sweating, reducing sweat production by 82–87%.
Sculptra (PLLA) stimulates your own collagen over months, lasting up to 2 years. Hyaluronic acid fillers add immediate volume for 6–18 months and can be dissolved.
Jawline filler for men can sharpen mandibular definition, but anatomy and product choice matter. Learn the risks, danger zones, and what creates a masculine result.
Xeomin is a botulinum toxin type A product without accessory proteins. Learn its uses, onset, duration, dosing caveats, cost, and patient fit.
Dermal filler can cause vision loss if material enters vessels linked to the eye. Learn the danger zones, mechanism, and what to ask before treatment.
Letybo is the newest FDA-approved neuromodulator in the U.S. Here is how it compares to Botox, Dysport, and Xeomin on onset, duration, unit conversion, cost, and patient…
RHA and Juvéderm are hyaluronic acid filler families with different strengths. Compare movement, structure, longevity, cost, and patient fit.
Baby Botox and regular Botox use the same drug at different doses. Here is how the dosing philosophy differs, what each approach can and cannot do, and who each is for.
Botox Cosmetic typically lasts 3–4 months, but duration varies by treatment area, dose, metabolism, and which neuromodulator you use. Here is what the evidence and the…
Jeuveau and Dysport are both FDA-approved botulinum toxin type A products, but they differ in unit dosing, onset speed, tissue spread, and ideal use cases. Here is how…