My son (21 months) was ordered a sweat test to "rule out cf." His symptoms include:
- difficulty passing first stools (needed stimulation after meconium)
- reflux (confirmed w/ UGI; treated successfully with Reglan and Prilosec, no longer requires meds)
- Constipation from 2 months - 8 months (treated successfully with Milk of Mag)
- Pneumonia x1 at 15 months
- Non-allergic Rhinitis
- Frequent wheezing / "asthma cough" (maintenance of Pulmicort x 1/day; Albuterol as needed)
- Re-current ear infections (Tubes placed April 2007 - infection free since)
- Re-current sinus infections - recent CT scan showed blocked maxillary sinuses
- Slow weight gain (13th percentile for weight, 25th for height - Terrible eater)
- Recurrent high fevers (probably secondary to sinusitis)
So .... we had the sweat test today and I was pleased to hear that the result was only a 4. Is this possible? Can it be this low? I have read a lot about how the sweat test can give a false negative and how the full Ambry Panel is the only definitive answer. Is the full panel only reccomended for people whose numbers fall into the borderline (or close to borderline) category, or is this something that I need to ask my son's pediatrician about?
Thank you!
- difficulty passing first stools (needed stimulation after meconium)
- reflux (confirmed w/ UGI; treated successfully with Reglan and Prilosec, no longer requires meds)
- Constipation from 2 months - 8 months (treated successfully with Milk of Mag)
- Pneumonia x1 at 15 months
- Non-allergic Rhinitis
- Frequent wheezing / "asthma cough" (maintenance of Pulmicort x 1/day; Albuterol as needed)
- Re-current ear infections (Tubes placed April 2007 - infection free since)
- Re-current sinus infections - recent CT scan showed blocked maxillary sinuses
- Slow weight gain (13th percentile for weight, 25th for height - Terrible eater)
- Recurrent high fevers (probably secondary to sinusitis)
So .... we had the sweat test today and I was pleased to hear that the result was only a 4. Is this possible? Can it be this low? I have read a lot about how the sweat test can give a false negative and how the full Ambry Panel is the only definitive answer. Is the full panel only reccomended for people whose numbers fall into the borderline (or close to borderline) category, or is this something that I need to ask my son's pediatrician about?
Thank you!