© O. Kreyden

Botulinum toxin A

A proven standard in hyperhidrosis treatment

Primary hyperhidrosis significantly impairs quality of life. This article reviews the role of botulinum toxin A as a safe and effective therapy, highlights proper patient assessment with the Minor starch test, and provides practical guidance on dosing, injection techniques and pain management in daily clinical practice.

During the Second World War, much research was done in the United States at Fort Detrick, Maryland, principally by Edward J. Schantz1 who was searching for an antidote to counter botulinum toxin which was thought to be a potential biological weapon ready to be used by several other countries. In 1949 Burgen showed that the block of acetylcholine release by botulinum toxin (BTX) occurred in the presynaptic nerve endings and not, as previously believed, by postsynaptic blockage of receptors, like atropine. In the 1960s ophthalmologist Alan Scott2 was searching for a non-surgical alternative for the treatment of strabismus. His idea to weaken the extra-ocular muscles with BTX brought him in contact with Ed Schantz. After several trials on monkeys, botulinum toxin sero-type A (BTX-A) was approved in 1989 by the Federal Drug Administration for the treatment of strabismus, blepharospasm and hemifacial spasm. Other fields of medicine quickly became interested, and BTX-A was used for a wide variety of indications, in particular for the treatment of hyperkinetic muscles. Bushara3 was the first to suggest a possible indication for BTX-A in the treatment of hyperhidrosis. The first patient in Switzerland was treated 1998 at the Dermatology Department of the University Hospital of Zurich (USZ). In 2000 it could be shown that 2 units of BTX per injection point are sufficient to treat axillary hyperhidrosis.4 Since 2002, BTX-A has been approved for the treatment of axillary hyperhidrosis in most of the countries.

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