Sweating is how your body cools itself when it becomes too hot (this can happen when you're working out, ill, or extremely anxious). Your sweat glands are instructed to begin producing sweat by your nervous system. In hyperhidrosis, some sweat glands overproduce sweat for no apparent reason.
Focal hyperhidrosis commonly results from: There are some tastes, smells, and foods—like citric acid, coffee, chocolate, peanut butter, and spices. Stress on the emotions, particularly anxiety. Heat. Spinal cord damage.
There are several causes of generalized or secondary hyperhidrosis: Dysautonomia (autonomic dysfunction) (autonomic dysfunction). Exercise, heat, and humidity. Illnesses like tuberculosis. Cancers like Hodgkin's disease (cancer of the lymphatic system). Menopause. Metabolic illnesses and conditions, such as hyperthyroidism, diabetes, hypoglycemia (low blood sugar), gout, pituitary disease, and pheochromocytoma (a benign tumor in the adrenal glands). significant mental stress.