Quantitative analysis of the local effect of skin temperature on sweating.

Abstract
Effects of local skin temperature on sweat gland activity were analyzed quantitatively by measuring changes in the rates of thermal sweating and of drug-induced weating by local heating. The data indicates that a rise in local temperature causes an accelerated increase in the rate of sweat production, the Q10 being around 2.5 regardless of the basal sweat rate with some individual variations. Local heating apparently facilitates transmitter release at the neuroglandular junction and augments glandular responsiveness, their significances being comparable.