"Sympathectomy is a technique about which we have limited knowledge, applied to disorders about which we have little understanding." Associate Professor Robert Boas, Faculty of Pain Medicine of the Australasian College of Anaesthetists and the Royal College of Anaesthetists, The Journal of Pain, Vol 1, No 4 (Winter), 2000: pp 258-260
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, April 26, 2008
Does bilateral thoracic sympathectomy predispose to reflex bronchospasm following tracheal intubation?
Immediately following intubation, ventilation became difficult. Chest auscultation revealed bilateral expiratory wheezing associated with decreased air entry and increased airway pressure up to 60 cm H2O. Oxygen saturation, as monitored by pulse oximetry, decreased from 100% to 80%.
The severe bronchospams occured immediately following tracheal intubation, suggesting that it may have been a reflex response which was triggered by instrumentation of the airway under light level of anesthesia.
Sympathectomy results in a decrease of plasma norepinephrine, and parasympathetic predominance which may increase airway resistance.
Thus, patients with essential hyperhidrosis who have undergone bilateral thoracic sympathectomy, may be more liable to develop reflex bronchospams under light levels of anesthesia.
Ahed Zeidan MD
Nazih Nahle MD
Anis Baraka MD FRCA
Sahel General Hospital, American Universisty of Beirut Medical Center
Hypoxaemia is of a major concern during thorascopic sympathectomy
Left, but not right, one-lung ventilation causes hypoxemia during endoscopic transthoracic sympathectomy
© 2000 International Anesthesia Research Society
CARDIOVASCULAR ANESTHESIA
Sequential Changes of Arterial Oxygen Tension in the Supine Position During One-Lung Ventilation
Department of Anesthesiology, Kurume University School of Medicine, Fukuoka, Japan
Implications: Close observation and prompt counteractions including termination of one-lung ventilation (OLV) are crucial for patients under OLV in the supine position, because life-threatening hypoxemia frequently occurs approximately 10 min after starting OLV, even under 100% oxygen inhalation. The left semilateral decubitus position was as effective as the left lateral decubitus position in avoiding life-threatening hypoxemia during OLV.Incidence of chest wall paresthesia after needlescopic video-assisted thoracic surgery for palmar hyperhidrosis
Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong SAR, China
Received 5 September 2004; received in revised form 28 September 2004; accepted 22 October 2004.
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +86 852 2632 2629; fax: +86 852 2647 8273. (E-mail: yimap@cuhk.edu.hk).
The effects of hypoxemia, G-6-PD deficiency and sympathectomy might all add to the development of acute pulmonary edema
Source: Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, Volume 45, Number 1, January 2001
Haemodynamic changes during thoracoscopic surgery
Main Articles
Anaesthesia. 55(1):10-16, January 2000.Brock, H. 1; Rieger, R. 2; Gabriel, C. 3; Polz, W. 4; Moosbauer, W. 1; Necek, S. 5
Abstract:
Summary: We investigated the haemodynamic and respiratory effects of one-lung ventilation and carbon dioxide insufflation in 13 adult patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopy. Cardiorespiratory variables were determined during carbon dioxide insufflation at intrahemithoracic pressures of 5, 10 and 15 mmHg, and after 5 and 15 min of one-lung ventilation. Carbon dioxide insufflation was associated with a clear deterioration in circulatory function. The cardiac index decreased subsequent to increasing intrathoracic pressures. The mean cardiac index (SD) at pressures of 10 and 15 mmHg was 1.86 (0.39) and 1.52 (0.46), respectively, and may be compared with the reduced venous return consistent with tension pneumothorax. One-lung ventilation did not affect haemodynamic variables but reduced arterial oxygenation indices (PaO2/FIO2) from 424.29 (160.79) after induction of anaesthesia, to 207.72 (125.50) after 5 min and 172.04 (72.03) after 15 min of one-lung ventilation, respectively. The oxygenation index was not influenced by intrahemithoracic carbon dioxide insufflation. One-lung ventilation via a double-lumen endobronchial tube is safe and convenient for video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. It has no further consequences on haemodynamic variables, whereas the compression of the lung by carbon dioxide insufflation may cause circulatory dysfunction.
one-lung ventilation causes hypoxemia during endoscopic transthoracic sympathectomy
Journal of Vascular Surgery : Reply - Published by Elsevier
2 Y Katz, E Zisman, S Isserles and B Rosenberg,Left, but not right, one-lung ventilation causes hypoxemia during endoscopic transthoracic sympathectomy.
ETS sympathetically maintained pain, and vasospastic or ischemic vascular disease
Article
Neurosurgery Quarterly. 12(2):89-99, June 2002.Wilkinson, Harold A.
Abstract:
Summary: Surgical resections of sympathetic ganglia from the thoracic, splanchnic, and lumbar area have been carried out for more than 100 years. In the past decade, neurosurgeons have become more interested in surgery on the sympathetic nervous system as less invasive techniques have been developed. Percutaneous radiofrequency and video-assisted endoscopic techniques have largely replaced open surgical thoracic sympathectomy. Lumbar and splanchnic sympathetic ablation is commonly done by percutaneous chemical techniques or, occasionally, by radiofrequency ablation, but the open techniques are still widely used. Sympathectomy is most widely employed for pathologic hyperhidrosis (especially the palmar component), sympathetically maintained pain, and vasospastic or ischemic vascular disease. The less invasive techniques are especially attractive for treating the sympathetically mediated cardiac diseases, including Prinzmetal angina, "syndrome X," and congenital long Q-T interval syndrome.
Surgical complications are usually manageable, but deaths have occurred (even with endoscopic techniques).
Endoscopic sympathetic block in the treatment
severe social phobia. Although the method is surgical and the effect hence mainly biolog-
ical, the psychological symptoms of social phobia were also significantly reduced. The
results are best if the main symptoms are blushing or palpitation, but even a smaller
reduction in the other symptoms is important if it helps the patient to break his isolation.
Knowledge of the elimination of embarrassing physical symptoms in social situations
helps the patient to expose himself to formerly impossible situations, and success in them
also causes psychological symptoms to subside. But the relief of psychological symp-
toms may also be due to direct a biological effect of the operation on the anxiety-mediat-
ing areas in the nervous system. The only meaningful side effect is compensatory sweat-
ing of the trunk, but not even that is significant when modern surgical method are used.
Clamping is as good as bilateral cauterisation, and the results may be equally good with
unilateral and bilateral clamping, but because there were only eight patients who had
undergone a unilateral clamping procedure, the material is not sufficient to allow definite
conclusions concerning that. The results remain unchanged over time, which shows that
they were not due to a placebo effect. In the future, it is important to compare this treat-
ment to traditional treatment in order to find out its place among the other, officially
approved methods of treating social phobia.
PÄIVI
POHJAVAARA
Faculty of Medicine,
Department of Psychiatry,
University of Oulu
OULU 2004