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  1. perspiration, in most mammals, water given off by the intact skin, either as vapour by simple evaporation from the epidermis (insensible perspiration) or as sweat, a form of cooling in which liquid actively secreted from sweat glands evaporates from the body surface.

  2. Apr 28, 2017 · Perspiration, or sweating, is the secretion of fluid (sweat) from sweat glands. This word is both a noun and a verb; it can refer to the act of sweating or to the sweat itself. Sweat mostly consists of water, along with minerals, urea, and lactic acid.

  3. Jun 24, 2017 · A gland is a group of cells or a “secreting organ” that excretes a chemical substance. This substance can take the form of hormones, sweat, saliva, mucus, or acids (i.e. HCl acid in gastric glands).

  4. Jul 17, 2019 · The purpose of this comprehensive review is to: 1) review the physiology of sweat gland function and mechanisms determining the amount and composition of sweat excreted onto the skin surface; 2) provide an overview of the well-established thermoregulatory functions and adaptive responses of the sweat gland; and 3) discuss the state of evidence ...

  5. Small tubular skin structures called sweat glands, also called sudoriparous or sudoriferous glands, are responsible for producing sweat. Exocrine glands are found all over the surface of the body and are responsible for sweat production. The integument’s appendages are the sweat glands.

  6. Sweat gland (eccrine, apocrine, apoeccrine) carcinomas are exceedingly rare, arise most frequently in the skin of the head and neck or the extremities, and manifest as painless papules or nodules that grow slowly. This type of neoplasm is usually diagnosed in individuals 50 to 70 years of age.

  7. Jul 17, 2019 · The purpose of this comprehensive review is to: 1) review the physiology of sweat gland function and mechanisms determining the amount and composition of sweat excreted onto the skin surface; 2) provide an overview of the well-established thermoregulatory functions and adaptive responses of the sweat gland; and 3) discuss the state of evidence f...

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