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Dive into the research topics where Harry J. Hurley is active.

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Featured researches published by Harry J. Hurley.


British Journal of Dermatology | 1966

AXILLARY HYPERHIDROSIS..: Clinical Features and Local Surgical Management.

Harry J. Hurley; Walter B. Shelley

IN October 1063, we described a new surgical technique for the management of axillary hyperhidrosis (Hurley and Shelley, 1963). A relatively simple approach, it consisted of resection of an elliptical segment of axillary skin containing a majority of the most active axillary sweat glands. This operation produced satisfactory reduction of axillary sweating in four patients and five volunteers described in that report. We have since surgically treated eighteen additional patients and volunteers, most of whom had much more severe axillary hy])erhidroRis than did the original group, re(iuiring modification of the surgical technique employed earlier. The present publication describes in detail the surgical approach employed in these people, the results achieved, and the effects of the surgery on axillarj^ odour and the local microflora. In addition, the clinical features of axillary hyperhidrosis will be discussed and evidence presented to indicate that the eccrine sweat glands, not the apocrine, are the sources of the excessive secretion seen in this condition.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1963

Generalized Anhidrosis Associated with Hodgkin's Disease and Acquired Ichthyosis

Robert S. English; Harry J. Hurley; Joseph A. Witkowski; John Sanders

Excerpt Anhidrosis, the absence of sweating, is a deficiency deserving careful investigation. It may result from a primary disturbance of the duct or secretory coil of the sweat glands, central or ...


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1963

The Merocrine Component of Apocrine Secretion.

Harry J. Hurley; Joseph A. Witkowski

Summary The prompt excretion of locally-introduced fluorescein sodium in axillary apocrine sweat has been described. This observation suggests that the secretion of apocrine sweat includes a fluid or merocrine component formed at the time of apocrine sweating.


Archives of Dermatology | 1953

Axillary odor; experimental study of the role of bacteria, apocrine sweat, and deodorants.

Walter B. Shelley; Harry J. Hurley; Anna C. Nichols


British Journal of Dermatology | 1958

THE ALLERGTO ORIGIN OF ZIRCONIUM DEODORANT GRANULOMAS.

Walter B. Shelley; Harry J. Hurley


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1953

The Physiology of the Human Axillary Apocrine Sweat Gland12

Walter B. Shelley; Harry J. Hurley


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1953

The Distribution of Cholinesterases in Human Skin, with Special Reference to Eccrine and Apocrine Sweat Glands1

Harry J. Hurley; Walter B. Shelley; George B. Koelle


JAMA | 1963

A SIMPLE SURGICAL APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT OF AXILLARY HYPERIDROSIS.

Harry J. Hurley; Walter B. Shelley


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1957

An Experimental Study of the Effects of Subcutaneous Implantation of Androgens and Estrogens on Human Skin1

Walter B. Shelley; Harry J. Hurley


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1956

The Anatomy and Histochemistry of the Arteriovenous Anastomosis in Human Digital Skin1

Harry J. Hurley; Giuseppi Moretti; Herbert Mescon

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Walter B. Shelley

University of Pennsylvania

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George B. Koelle

University of Pennsylvania

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Herbert Mescon

University of Pennsylvania

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Anna C. Nichols

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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Margaret Gray

University of Pennsylvania

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