Determining whether dry syndrome is under control requires a comprehensive evaluation based on symptoms and tests and examinations.
1.Symptoms. The presence of fever, weight loss, enlarged lymph nodes, swollen glands, and other systemic involvement of joints, skin, lungs, kidneys, muscles, and nerves.
2. Tests. The presence of proteinuria, renal insufficiency, elevated creatine kinase, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, hypocomplementemia, and elevated immunoglobulin are associated with the condition of dry syndrome.
3.Examination. Lung CT with or without interstitial lung lesions, lung function.
If the patient has the above symptoms, it means that the condition has not been well controlled, and it is recommended that the patient should go to the rheumatology and immunology department of the regular hospital to improve the relevant examinations under the guidance of the doctor to evaluate the condition and standardize the diagnosis and treatment.