The sweatspot test assesses the local sweat response to an intradermal injection of acetylcholine. It has been reported as a more sensitive indicator of autonomic dysfunction in important diabetic men than either pupillary or cardiovascular tests, and has been used to establish the presence of autonomic dysfunction in patients with idiopathic chronic constipation. However, the usefulness of this test as a simple and quick method of diagnosing autonomic dysfunction in an elderly population has not been established. This is important given the high prevalence of reduced autonomic function with ageing and hypertension. We compared the age-associated responses in the sweatspot test and its relation to cardiovascular autonomic function in elderly normotensive and hypertensive subjects. We studied eleven normotensive and 24 untreated hypertensive elderly subjects (mean age 75.7 years, range 63-85) and compared the results of the sweatspot test to a young control group (n = 11, mean age 32.0 years, range 25-41), and to a standard battery of cardiovascular autonomic function tests. The median sweatspot score was significantly lower in the elderly compared with young subjects (1.9 vs. 12.0, p < 0.0001) although there was no difference between elderly normotensive and hypertensive subjects (1.6 vs. 2.4, p = 0.8). No correlation was demonstrated between the median sweatspot score and the number of abnormal cardiovascular tests. The sweatspot test was grossly abnormal in all elderly subjects and was not correlated to changes in cardiovascular autonomic function. Its diagnostic use in the elderly is therefore of very limited value.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01826194 | DOI Listing |
Clin Auton Res
April 2009
Autonomic and Peripheral Nerve Laboratory, Dept. of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 1 Deaconess Road, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Sudomotor dysfunction is common in many subtypes of neuropathy but is one of the earliest detectable neurophysiologic abnormalities in distal small fiber neuropathy. Clinical assessments of sudomotor function include thermoregulatory sweat testing (TST), quantitative sudomotor axon reflex testing (QSART), silicone impressions, the sympathetic skin response (SSR), the acetylcholine sweat-spot test and quantitative direct and indirect axon reflex testing (QDIRT). These testing techniques, when used in combination, can detect and localize pre- and postganglionic lesions, can provide early diagnosis of sudomotor dysfunction and can monitor disease progression or disease recovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Endosc
February 2009
Department of Thoracic Surgery and Unit of Human Anatomy and Embryology, Servei de Cirurgia Toràcica, Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, School of Medicine, University of Barcelona, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Feixa Llarga, Spain.
Background: In this study, patients treated by thoracoscopic sympathicolysis for palmar hyperhidrosis were evaluated to determine the number and response of sweat glands to intradermal acetylcholine stimulus.
Methods: A total of 30 patients were included in the study. Group A consisted of 10 patients with palmar hyperhidrosis who underwent thoracoscopic sympathicolysis in October 2005, and group B consisted of 20 patients who underwent surgery during the years 1999, 2000, and 2001.
Tohoku J Exp Med
December 2005
Department of Neurology, Pamukkale University Faculty of Medicine, Denzli, and Department of Neurology, Atatürk Education and Research Hospital Izmir, Turkey.
The sympathetic skin response (SSR) is considered as one of the indexes of autonomic nervous system functions, especially related with the sudomotor function of unmyelinated sympathetic fibers. SSRs are recorded as the potentials with biphasic or multiphasic waveforms by conventional electromyography. SSRs are evaluated by measuring latency (time from the stimulus to the onset), amplitude, and area (the space under the curve of the waveform).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld J Gastroenterol
August 2004
Section of Internal Medicine, Department of Internal and Public Medicine, University Medical School of Bari, P.zza G. Cesare 11, 70124 Bari, Italy.
Aim: Gallbladder and gastrointestinal motility defects exist in gallstones patients and to a lesser extent in pigment gallstone patients. To investigated the role of gallbladder and gastrointestinal motility disorders in pigment gallstone formation in beta-thalassemia major.
Methods: Twenty-three patients with beta-thalassemia major (16 females; age range 18-37 years) and 70 controls (47 females, age range 18-40 years) were studied for gallbladder and gastric emptying (functional ultrasonography), orocecal transit (OCTT, H(2)-breath test), autonomic dysfunction (sweat-spot, cardiorespiratory reflex tests), bowel habits, gastrointestinal symptoms and quality of life (all with questionnaires).
Dis Colon Rectum
February 1999
Istituto di Clinica Chirurgica, University of Bari Medical School, Italy.
Introduction: Autonomic neuropathy is thought to play a role in the pathogenesis of slow-transit constipation, but other gastrointestinal organs may also be involved, even if they are symptom-free. We investigated whether motility in gastrointestinal organs other than the colon was impaired in patients with slow-transit constipation and whether the autonomic nervous system was involved.
Methods: Twenty-one consecutive patients (18 females; median age, 46 years) with severe chronic constipation (< or = 2 defecations/week and delayed colonic transit time) were studied.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!