The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-3329
Print ISSN : 0040-8727
ISSN-L : 0040-8727
The Significance of the Sweat Test in Chronic Pancreatitis
MAKOTO HANAWATAKAAKI TAKEBESUSUMU TAKAHASHIMASARU KOIZUMIKATSUHIRO ENDO
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1978 Volume 125 Issue 1 Pages 59-69

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Abstract

In order to study the disposition which is thought to be latent in chronic panereatitis, we investigated the sweat chloride concentration of 95 normal subjects, 43 cases of chronic pancreatitis, 12 cases of cholelithiasis, 15 cases of peptic ulcers, 16 cases of hepatic diseases and 23 cases of diabetes mellitus with the sweat test, using the method of pilocarpine iontophoresis. We obtained the following results. (1) In normal subjects, the sweat chloride concentration was inclined to rise gradually with age from childhood to adulthood; the mean value of sweat chloride concentration was 30.0 mEq/liter in adults from 20 years old, and the upper limit was about 60mEq/liter. (2) The mean value of sweat chloride concentration was 60.0mEq/liter in chronic calcifying pancreatitis; this value was markedly higher than that of control subjects of the same age (p<0. 001). (3) The mean value of sweat chloride concentration in cholelithiasis, peptic ulcer and hepatic diseases did not differ significantly from control subjects. The mean value of sweat chloride concentration in diabetes mellitus was significantly higher than that of control subjects (p<0.01), but was significantly lower than that in chronic pancreatitis (p<0.01). (4) It was supposed that some cases of chronic pancreatitis have a congenital disposition toward abnormal secre-tion of sweat glands and epithelium in the pancreatic duct, resembling cystic fibrosis, and this disposition leads easily to pancreatic disorders when the individual is exposed to various external factors.

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