Teen hyperhidrosis is clinically identical to adult hyperhidrosis and needs clinical-strength treatment, not a standard teen deodorant. Here is which DryDry formula suits teenage skin.
Most people with hyperhidrosis have never used clinical-strength OTC correctly. Here is the full treatment ladder from aluminum chloride through prescription and procedural options.
Craniofacial hyperhidrosis requires dermatologist management. Here is what causes facial and scalp sweating, what treatments exist, and how to manage co-occurring body area sweating.
Truncal hyperhidrosis affecting the back and torso requires dermatologist management. Here is why back sweating is hard to treat topically and what works for co-occurring areas.
Clinical-strength antiperspirant for hyperhidrosis is hard to find in German pharmacies. DryDry is Swedish-made, ships to Germany, and is one of the brand's top two European markets.
Menopause triggers heavy sweating through hormonal changes, not heat. Clinical-strength aluminum chloride reduces gland output regardless of the trigger. Here is how to manage it.
Women with heavy sweating often need clinical-strength, but alcohol-based formulas irritate reactive or post-shave skin. DryDry Sensitive is alcohol-free and clinical-strength.
Clinical-strength OTC and prescription antiperspirants use the same active ingredient at different concentrations. Most heavy sweaters succeed with OTC applied correctly before needing a prescription.
DryDry Original builds a gel plug inside the sweat duct overnight and lasts up to 7 days per application. Here is how it works and the right maintenance schedule for heavy underarm sweating.
Most sensitive-skin antiperspirants sacrifice strength. The DryDry Sensitive delivers clinical-strength aluminum chloride alcohol-free, providing 48 hours of protection without irritation.
DryDry Original is designed to last up to 7 days per application. Here is what the first week looks like, how the loading period works, and what affects the protection window.
The American Academy of Dermatology recommends clinical-strength aluminum chloride as the first-line OTC treatment for hyperhidrosis. Here is how to choose and use it correctly.