2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12890-015-0147-3
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Diagnostic accuracy of nasal nitric oxide for establishing diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia: a meta-analysis

Abstract: BackgroundTo date, diagnosis of Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (PCD) remains difficult and challenging. We systematically evaluated the diagnostic performance of nasal Nitric Oxide (nNO) measurement for the detection of PCD, using either velum-closure (VC) or non-velum-closure (non-VC) techniques.MethodsAll major electronic databases were searched from inception until March 2015 using appropriate terms. The sensitivity and specificity of nNO measurement was calculated in PCD patients diagnosed by transmission elec… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Exhaled air from the lower airways has a much lower concentration of NO than the nose; thus, maneuvers must be instituted to close the soft palate to limit contamination of nasal air by air from the lower airways (48). This approach has been validated in adults and children over 5 years of age (13, 49), but is less feasible in younger children. For infants and young children, one study measured nNO during tidal breathing (50); however, it should be noted that nNO values during tidal breathing are ~40% lower in healthy subjects than values obtained at plateau during palate closure.…”
Section: Ultrastructural and Functional Diagnostic Testsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Exhaled air from the lower airways has a much lower concentration of NO than the nose; thus, maneuvers must be instituted to close the soft palate to limit contamination of nasal air by air from the lower airways (48). This approach has been validated in adults and children over 5 years of age (13, 49), but is less feasible in younger children. For infants and young children, one study measured nNO during tidal breathing (50); however, it should be noted that nNO values during tidal breathing are ~40% lower in healthy subjects than values obtained at plateau during palate closure.…”
Section: Ultrastructural and Functional Diagnostic Testsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Findings include subsegmental atelectasis, mucus plugging, air trapping, ground-glass opacity, and peribronchial thickening. Bronchiectasis can occur during infancy, and ~50–75% of older pediatric patients and nearly all adults with PCD have bronchiectasis with worse disease in the middle lobe and lingula, as well as basilar regions (25-27, 49, 58). Chest CT is more sensitive for detecting early lung disease in PCD, compared to lung function testing by spirometry (60).…”
Section: Lung Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The other routinely used PCD diagnostic tests, the measurement of nNO and HSVM, have both been reported to perform better than TEM. More specifically, a recent meta-analysis of nNO measurements in PCD patients has demonstrated a pooled sensitivity of 93 to 95% depending on vellum closure status during testing (42) while a number of studies have reported high sensitivity values for HSVM ranging from 89 (43) to 100% (29). Although our findings suggest that PCD diagnosis should not rely only on TEM, performance of this test may still be beneficial since determination of an ultrastructural defect or confirmation of its absence may guide genetic testing wherever this is available.…”
Section: Pcd Prevalence and Tem Detection Ratementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nitric oxide (NO) is a small diffusible gas molecule that is involved in multiple functions throughout the body. Multiple studies have demonstrated that nitric oxide within the nasal cavity (particularly within the sinuses) is high in healthy individuals and much lower (<10% of normal values) in PCD, suggesting that nasal NO (nNO) measurement may be a useful test for PCD [29,84,88,135]. Nasal NO is measured by a non-invasive approach using a small nasal probe to aspirate nasal gas at a rate of approximately 5 ml/second for measurement of nitric oxide content [10,14].…”
Section: Nasal Nitric Oxide Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%