Friday, May 13, 2011

slowing of the heart rate usually occurs on the second to fourth day after sympathectomy

The rate fell to a level between 40 and 6o per minute, the maximal slowing usually occurring on the second to fourth day after operation. Consistent slowing of the rate was not observed after a unilateral thoracic sympathectomy of either side. While there was some recovery from the maximum brady-
cardia with the passage of time in most patients, relatively slow resting cardiac rates and failure of tachycardia to develop with postural hypotension or exercise persisted in all patients.



Skoog's12 work has shown that there are marked differences in the number and precise location of the accessory ganglion cells in the cervical region in different patients and on the two sides in the same patient.

Even when a single midthoracic paravertebral ganglion is left in place in an otherwise total sympathectomy the thoracic dermatome supplied by the ganglion appears for several days or weeks to be sympathectomized also. Then, sweating begins to appear, and it increases gradually in amount until the skin of that dermatome may be dripping. This phenomenon more than any other meets the
objection of those who maintain that if residual pathways do exist, the evidence of their presence should be manifest immediately after operation.
Annals of Surgery, 1949 October
Volume 130 Number 4