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. 1991:8 Spec No:S78-81.
doi: 10.1111/j.1464-5491.1991.tb02163.x.

Assessment of basal and stimulated sweating in diabetes using a direct-reading computerized sudorometer

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Assessment of basal and stimulated sweating in diabetes using a direct-reading computerized sudorometer

D M Levy et al. Diabet Med. 1991.

Abstract

Abnormalities of eccrine sweating are thought to be common in diabetes. We describe a ventilated-capsule sudorometer for the continuous measurement of basal and stimulated sweat secretion. It is sensitive (detecting as little as 200 ng water vapour), precise, and stable. Since it measures dewpoint rather than relative humidity, it can be calibrated to read sweat volumes directly and independently of ambient temperature and humidity. Preliminary studies using this technique show that basal skin water loss is significantly diminished in patients with established diabetic neuropathy (0.91 +/- 0.18 g (+/- SD) cm-2 h-1) compared with normal subjects (1.21 +/- 0.39 g cm-2 h-1; p = 0.04) and non-neuropathic diabetic subjects (1.32 +/- 0.48 g cm-2 h-1; p = 0.04), and that local sweating induced by iontophoresis of 10 g l-1 acetylcholine is significantly reduced in diabetic subjects up to 5 min of recording (0.95 +/- 0.43 vs 1.26 +/- 0.40 mg; p = 0.02). In neuropathic subjects both low- and high-amplitude responses are seen, the latter probably representing denervation supersensitivity. Further studies with sensitive sudorometry should enable the mechanisms of these abnormal responses to be established.

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