The amount of compensatory sweating depends on the patient, the damage that the white rami communicans incurs, and the amount of cell body reorganization in the spinal cord after surgery.
Other potential complications include inadequate resection of the ganglia, gustatory sweating, pneumothorax, cardiac dysfunction, post-operative pain, and finally Horner’s syndrome secondary to resection of the stellate ganglion.
www.ubcmj.com/pdf/ubcmj_2_1_2010_24-29.pdf

After severing the cervical sympathetic trunk, the cells of the cervical sympathetic ganglion undergo transneuronic degeneration
After severing the sympathetic trunk, the cells of its origin undergo complete disintegration within a year.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1439-0442.1967.tb00255.x/abstract

Saturday, January 19, 2008

sympathectomy-induced bone resorption

A mechanism for sympathectomy-induced bone resorption in
the middle ear.
Author:Sherman, B E : Chole, R A
Citation:Otolaryngol-Head-Neck-Surg. 1995 Nov; 113(5): 569-81


Now I want to look at the correlative psychological modes of the sympathetic and parasympathetic activity. These are general qualities rather than fixed attributes.

Sympathectomy causes parasympathetic dominance. It will 'reset' your modus operandi. It will change you.

Sympathetic - Parasympathetic
Activity - Receptivity
Speed - Slowness
Tension - Relaxation
Focus - Scope
Convergent thinking - Divergent thinking
Extraversion - Introversion
Goal-oriented - Process-oriented
Agency - Presence
Direction - Elaboration


Doctors in Finland, US and Iran also offer sympathectomy to reduce anxiety, fear, stress, phobias, to reduce aggressiveness, reduce depression (sic!), reduce palpitations. The psychological changes following surgery are widely known among medical professionals, but patients are not told about them. They are told that this is a safe, minimally invasive procedure. Maybe the surgical cut they need is minimal, the procedure is certainly not minimally invasive. It will invade and violate the core of your being. It will change your body and your mind. Many people get depressed because they are not able to cope with this, like a friend who killed himself after 8 years of waiting and hoping that his condition will improve. He was 46.

"Lets just stop a minute to become aware of our own autonomic state: tongue, heart rate, peristalsis, skin – temp and moisture – warm & dry; cold&wet; relaxation/tension. Attentiveness – alert to broad awareness.."

seminar ‘The New Anatomy: Exploring the Mind in the Body’ run at Chiron February-March 2001.

It will be all altered. Sympathectomy produces a parasympathetic dominance.

AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM

The Autonomic Nervous System:
Barometer of Emotional Intensity and Internal Conflict

A lecture given for Confer, 27th March, 2001
The material for this lecture is part of a six evening seminar ‘The New Anatomy: Exploring the Mind in the Body’ run at Chiron February-March 2001
.
In standard physiology the two parts of the ANS have been perceived as functioning reciprocally: the sympathetic governing arousal, the fight or flight reaction and the parasympathetic involving relaxation, recuperation and digestion. The sympathetic nervous system is activated by any stimulus over an individual’s threshold (and the threshold can vary enormously), including feelings, and by noise, light, drugs and chemicals (e.g. caffeine).In response to the stimulus an immediate anticipatory state is generated by the release of adrenaline. This causes the heart to beat more quickly and strongly, increases blood supply to the muscles, raises blood pressure, dilates the bronchii and increases the breathing rate, raises the blood sugar level for increased energy, speeds up mental activity, increases tension in the muscles, dilates pupils and increases sweating. Non-emergency functions, such as digestion are lessened or suspended. (priming phase – short-term) Walter Cannon coined the phrase ‘fight or flight’ to describe the function of the rapid mobilisation of resources.

ANS and emotional intensity

The Autonomic Nervous System:
Barometer of Emotional Intensity and Internal Conflict

A lecture given for Confer, 27th March, 2001
The material for this lecture is part of a six evening seminar ‘The New Anatomy: Exploring the Mind in the Body’ run at Chiron February-March 2001
.

The Autonomic Nervous System has two branches, the Sympathetic and the Parasympathetic, which regulate the involuntary processes of the body, the viscera, and sense organs, glands and blood vessels. In evolutionary terms it is older than the CNS and its anatomical circuitry is broadly dispersed, creating a general response, quite unlike the highly specific pathways and response of the CNS. This generalised, widely distributed structure enables it to mediate overall changes in state; it is part of the limbic system which has also been known as the mammalian or emotional brain.

...– we now know that it is dynamically related to many other parts of the brain especially the orbitofrontal cortex. Autonomic also means self-regulating and this is a key principle of all body systems, which depend of constant feedback in order to maintain homeostasis. There are multiple feedback loops in the body which continually send and receive information about what’s going on and the ANS is part of this wider complex.


The FINOHTA REPORT

"Endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy is associated with significant immediate and long-term adverse effects. This is alarming especially since the operation is performed to alleviate a relatively harmless condition. Many patients also suffer from compensatory hyperhidrosis after ETS. Due to wide variation in the reporting of adverse effects, it is
probable that these have been underreported most of the time. "

SYMPATHECTOMY ON THE FOX NEWS

http://www.livevideo.com/video/DA86D572A6634B558B52B5B5AF79DE42/ets-fox-news-sympathectomy-sid.aspx