Sweat tests to diagnose cystic fibrosis in adults.
- 30 April 1983
- Vol. 286 (6375) , 1381-1383
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.286.6375.1381
Abstract
Twenty five patients with cystic fibrosis and 25 controls were studied to define a sweat sodium concentration in adults that could be taken as diagnostic of cystic fibrosis. Some of the controls had a sweat sodium concentration of over 50 mmol(mEq)/l, and thus cystic fibrosis should be diagnosed in an adult only when two measurements of sweat sodium concentration are above 70 mmol/l. In cases in which the sweat sodium concentration was borderline a suppression test using fludrocortisone improved the accuracy of diagnosis; this test entails recording the lowest concentration reached after administration of the drug. A scatter diagram of the baseline sweat sodium concentrations plotted against the lowest concentration attained after suppression with fludrocortisone may aid the diagnosis further.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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