Abstract

Aim. To develop a method for stimulating sweating that is rapid, painless, and avoids the risk of heat stress.Background. Since the discovery that there is a high concentration of sodium and chloride in the sweat of patients with cystic fibrosis of the pancreas in 1953, the sweat test has been performed by placing the patient's body in a plastic bag with or without hot water bottles to stimulate sweating. This method is unsatisfactory because of complications such as hyperpyrexia and heat stroke. Direct injection of a cholinergic agent intradermally is painful and therefore not practical.Methods. A rheostat with a milliampere meter was constructed at a cost of ∼$7 that allowed the iontophoresis of pilocarpine into the skin using negative and positive (2-cm diameter) electrocardiography electrodes. The positive electrode was placed on the flexor surface of the arm over a filter paper soaked in 0.2 mL of 0.2% pilocarpine nitrate. Current (0.2 mA) was applied for 5 minutes and then sweat was collected onto a preweighed filter paper for 30 minutes. Sweat chloride was determined by a polarographic method. Sweat tests were performed on 25 patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), 17 asymptomatic relatives and 27 control patients. Patients with CF had sweat chloride concentration >80 mEq/L; relatives, 32.5 mEq/L (highest 57 mEq/L); and control subjects, 21.1 mEq/L (highest 60 mEq/L).Conclusions. The iontophoresis of pilocarpine into the skin is a rapid, painless, safe, and reliable method for stimulating sweating and facilitating the determination of sweat chloride concentration.

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