"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
Thursday, November 27, 2008
sympathectomy abolished the differences in body fat accumulation
and those predisposed to obesity, may have a defective
thermogenic response to meal ingestion when compared
with lean individuals (Raben et al. 1994; Napoli &
Horton, 1996; Matsumoto et al. 2001). De Jonge & Bray
(1997) concluded that DIT was lower in obesity, an out-
come demonstrated in twenty-two of twenty-nine studies
The role of the sympathetic nervous system may be
important to the results documented here (Fagius &
Berne, 1994). There is evidence for a reduced sympathetic
nervous system activity in the aetiology of obesity in ani-
mals and man (Bray, 1990; Matsumoto et al. 2001).
While all macronutrients stimulate the sympathetic nervous
system (Fagius & Berne, 1994), the type of dietary fat has
important influences as well (Young & Walgren, 1994).
Takeuchi et al. (1995) and Matsuo et al. (1995) have
demonstrated a lower sympathetic activity and low DIT,
but a higher carcass fat content in rats fed beef tallow
(saturated fat) as compared with safflower oil (unsaturated
fat). Importantly, sympathectomy abolished the differences
in body fat accumulation and DIT between the two dietary
fat groups.
M. J. Soares*, S. J. Cummings, J. C. L. Mamo, M. Kenrickand L. S. Piers1
Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science, School of Public Health, Curtin University of Technology,
Department of Human Movement and Exercise Science, University of Western Australia,
British Journal of Nutrition (2004), 91, 245–252
Influence of vagatomy and sympathectomy on thermogenesis
P. L. Andrews, N. J. Rothwell and M. J. Stock
Infusion of rats with insulin (8 U/day via implanted minipump) for 7 days caused a 22% rise in resting oxygen consumption, which was inhibited by acute injection of the beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol. Insulin treatment produced significant increases in brown fat mass, protein content, and total thermogenic activity (assessed from binding of guanosine diphosphate to isolated brown fat mitochondria), but these responses were inhibited by prior surgical sympathectomy of the tissue. Animals subjected to subdiaphragmatic vagotomy gained more weight than pair-fed, sham-operated controls and showed reductions in total energy expenditure, the acute thermogenic response to a meal and brown adipose tissue activity. Daily injections of insulin (1 U/day) prevented all of these effects of vagotomy. These data demonstrate that the changes in brown fat activity induced by exogenous insulin are mediated by the sympathetic nervous system and that the depressed thermogenesis and brown fat activity associated with vagotomy appear to be due to a relative insulin deficiency and can be reversed by treatment with the hormone.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 249: E239-E243, 1985; Brown adipose tissue - thermogenesis
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6380306?ordinalpos=1&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_DiscoveryPanel.Pubmed_Discovery_RA&linkpos=4&log$=relatedreviews&logdbfrom=pubmed
Landsberg L, Saville ME, Young JB.
Am J Physiol. 1984 Aug;247(2 Pt 1):E181-9.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
sympathectomy induces a disappearance of diurnal fluctuation in the sensitivity to injected noradrenaline
Petrović VM, Maksimović K, Davidović V.
Arch Int Physiol Biochim. 1980 Aug;88(3):273-6.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6159854
Monday, November 24, 2008
Surgical aspects of chronic post-thoracotomy pain
Mark L. Rogers, John P. Duffy
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Nottingham City Hospital, Hucknall Road, Nottingham NG5 1PB, UK
Received 16 May 2000;
Autonomic neuropathy in the skin following sympathectomy
I. Faerman1, E. Faccio3, I. Calb2, J. Razumny1, N. Franco2, A. Dominguez2 and H. A. Podestá1
Diabetologia
Volume 22, Number 2 / February, 1982
Saturday, November 22, 2008
relevant to the pathogenesis of human dysautonomias
This model of selective cholinergic autoimmunity represents another tool for autonomic physiology and may be relevant to the pathogenesis of human dysautonomias.
S Brimijoin and V A Lennon
James-Lang Theory of Emotion
We have experiences, and as a result, our autonomic nervous system creates physiological events such as muscular tension, heart rate increases, perspiration, dryness of the mouth, etc. This theory proposes that emotions happen as a result of these, rather than being the cause of them.
The sequence thus is as follows:
Event ==> arousal ==> interpretation ==> emotion
The bodily sensation prepares us for action, as in the Fight-or-Flight reaction. Emotions grab our attention and at least attenuate slower cognitive processing.
http://changingminds.org/explanations/theories/james_lange_emotion.htm
DURATION OF VASODILATATION AFTER LUMBAR SYMPATHECTOMY
A. Mcpherson M.B. Lpool, M.R.C.P, LAMING EVANS RESEARCH FELLOW, and A. W. L. Kessel M.B.E., M.C., F.R.C.S, CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT, INSTITUTE OF ORTHOPÆDICS, LONDON
ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND., United Kingdom
Available online 5 September 2003.
STERILITY AND PSYCHONEUROSES FOLLOWING LUMBAR SYMPATHECTOMY
ArthurF. Hurst M.D. Oxon., F.R.C.P. Lond., SENIOR PHYSICIAN TO GUY'S HOSPITAL
Available online 22 September 2003.
LACK OF RETURN OF VASCULAR TONE IN THE FEET AFTER SYMPATHECTOMY
R. B. Lynn M.D. Queen's Univ., Ont., F.R.C.S., F.R.C.S.E., ASSISTANT LECTURER IN SURGERY and Peter Martin V.R.D., M.Chir. Camb., F.R.C.S.E., ASSISTANT SURGEON AND LECTURER IN SURGERY POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF LONDON
Available online 20 September 2003.
Postsympathectomy pain and changes in sensory neuropeptides
Schon F.
Lancet. 1985 Nov 23;2(8465):1158-60.
Pain after sympathectomy
Farcot JM, Grasser C, Muller JF.
Clinique de la Toussaint, Strasbourg.
Agressologie. 1990 Apr;31(4):191-7.
Friday, November 21, 2008
M.D.s Knock Surgery for Hyperhidrosis & Huge Insurance Scam includes ETS
this link.)
According to the article, the most common problem following ETS is increased and profuse sweating on other parts of the body, most often the back, legs, groin, and abdomen. This compensatory sweating, reports Macleans, can be mild to severe and occurs in 80 to 90 percent of patients. In one study of people who had surgery for excessive underarm sweating, 90 percent of the patients reported compensatory sweating and half of them were forced to change their clothes during the day because of it.
In related news, major news outlets (including "The New York Times") have reported this week on a massive insurance scam in the US in which thousands of patients from 40 states had been transported to California to undergo unnecessary surgical and diagnostic procedures. Insurers and employers have lost US $350 million in claims paid to date due to the illegal operations.
As part of the scheme, patients traveled to outpatient surgery clinics in California to receive three or more procedures in a single week. Among the procedures unnecessarily performed on these patients, according to The New York Times, was "...a highly unusual procedure to treat 'sweaty palms.'" The paper quoted an expert who said this particular surgery "posed potential risks to the patient because it involved collapsing the patient's lungs and deactiviating a nerve near the spine."
In return for undergoing unnecessary colonoscopies, endoscopies, and surgeries for "sweaty palms", participating patients were paid anywhere from $200 to $2,000 each and may have received discounts on cosmetic surgery.
http://www.sweatsolutions.org/sweatsolutions/Article.asp?ArticleCode=19570137&EditionCode=95129982
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Cervical sympathectomy affects gonadotropin-releasing hormone, luteinizing hormone and testosterone in male rats
| Journal of Anesthesia | |
| Publisher | Springer Japan |
| ISSN | 0913-8668 (Print) 1438-8359 (Online) |
| Issue | Volume 9, Number 2 / June, 1995 |
Hiroshi Iwama1 , Choichiro Tase1, Yoshikazu Tonosaki2 and Yasuo Sugiura2
| (1) | Department of Anesthesiology, Fukushima Medical College, 1 Hikarigaoka, 960-12 Fukushima, Japan |
| (2) | Department of Anatomy, Fukushima Medical College, 1 Hikarigaoka, 960-12 Fukushima, Japan |
Received: 24 August 1994 Accepted: 16 December 1994
a defect at the adrenoceptor level in patients with sympathectomy
A Skin Test for Autonomic Neuropathy
A. Hoffmann, D. Conen, U. Leibundgut, W. Berger
Copyright © 1982 S. Karger AG, BaselMedizinische Universitäts-Poliklinik, Departement für Innere Medizin, Kantonsspital, Basel, Schweiz
http://content.karger.com/ProdukteDB/produkte.asp?Aktion=ShowAbstract&ArtikelNr=115450&Ausgabe=234380&ProduktNr=223840
The global recurrence rate was 8.8%
Dominique Gossot, MDa*, Domenico Galetta, MDa, Antoine Pascal, MDa, Denis Debrosse, MDa, Raffaele Caliandro, MDa, Philippe Girard, MDa, Jean-Baptiste Stern, MDa, Dominique Grunenwald, MDa
Thoracic Department, Institut Mutualiste Montsouris, Paris, France
Ann Thorac Surg 2003;75:1075-1079
symptoms subsequently deteriorated
We describe a patient who underwent upper thoracic sympathectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis, and whose symptoms subsequently deteriorated, becoming worse than those on initial presentation.
Accepted for publication 6 January 1995
The results of endoscopic sympathectomy deteriorate progressively from the immediate outcome
The results of endoscopic sympathectomy deteriorate progressively from the immediate outcome.
Dr T. S.-M. Chiou 1 *, S.-C. Chen 21Department of Neurosurgery, Chung Shan Medical and Dental College Hospital, 23, Section 1, Taichung Kang Road, Taichung, Taiwan, Republic of China
British journal of surgery
ISSN 0007-1323 CODEN BJSUAM
1999, vol. 86, no1, pp. 45-47 (12 ref.)
Friday, November 14, 2008
ROLE OF THE SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM IN THE ONSET OF HYPERTENSION IN THE RAT: THE EFFECT OF 6-OH-DOPAMINE
Ming Li 1 Judith A. Whitworth 1 , 2
1 Department of Nephrology, Royal Melbourne Hospital and Howard Florey Institute of Experimental Physiology and Medicine, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Correspondence to 2 Professor J. A. Whitworth, School of Medicine, St George's Hospital, Kogarah, NSW 2217, Australia.
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology
Volume 18 Issue 4, Pages 197 - 204
Published Online: 28 Jun 2007
12 October 1990 7 December 1990
Monday, November 10, 2008
ETS for severe cases of LQT
Selective left cervical sympathectomy
may be considered for:
1. Those with severe disease and in
whom beta blockers are contra-
indicated or AICD cannot be placed or
is not wanted. 2. Controlling VT
storms in those with an AICD, 3.
LQT3 or a personal or family history
of events during rest or sleep.
From the publication by the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand,
Volume XVIII, No. 1, March 2006
This document represents the views of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand. The guidelines were approved by the Council of the CSANZ on 25th November, 2005.
Friday, October 31, 2008
Sympathectomy disrupts feedback from the viscera
Experiments in animals demonstrate that sympathectomy may retard aversive conditioning (DiGusto and King, 1972) most likely because sympathectomy reduces fear.
In order for feedback to occur, there must be a means for the viscera and autonomic nervous system to become activated.
Clinical Neuropsychology
By Kenneth M. Heilman, Edward ValensteinDegeneration patterns of postganglionic fibers following sympathectomy
K. H. Andres, M. von Düring, W. Jänig and R. F. Schmidt
Anatomy and Embryology
Springer Berlin / Heidelberg
Volume 172, Number 2 / August, 1985
http://www.springerlink.com/content/m21m2612n2147011/
sympathectomy is associated with increased pulmonary metastases
Journal of Neuroimmunology 1992;37:191-202.
Brenner, GJ, Felten, SY, Felten, DL, Cohen, N and Moynihan, JA.
http://www.massgeneral.org/nprg/brenner.htm
sympathectomy involves division of adrenergic, cholinergic and sensory fibers
In general, sympathtectomy has been used for one or more of the following purposes:
1/ to eliminate tonic or engendered responses which depend upon impulses in adrenergic nerves;
2/ to eliminate visceral stores of adrenergic substances which depend upon the integrity of the postganglionic sympathetic innervation;
3/ to eliminate postganglionic sympathetic tissue as a locus for the synthesis, uptake, binding, release and metabolism of adrenergic substances;
4/ to eliminate visceral afferent fibers which are frequently distributed in common with autonomic nerves.
It is clear that sympathectomy is not a selective excision of adrenergic elements only. It is well recognized that preganglionic sympathectomy involves division of cholinergic elements and sensory fibers.
Although the larger portion of sympathetic inflow to an organ can be eliminated by excision of relatively large, well defined anatomical structures in the sympathetic nervous system, there may be many aberrant pathways of innervation. The structure of the terminal apparatus for innervation in most organs is not clear, and it is not known how widely or how rapidly a seemingly small residue of postganglionic fibers can proliferate or branch to occupy sites of degenerated elements.
Theodore Cooper
Surgical Sympathectomy and Adrenergic Function
Department of Surgery, St Louis University School of Medicine
Pharmacological Reviews, Vol. 18, No.1
http://pharmrev.aspetjournals.org/cgi/pdf_extract/18/1/611
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Sympathectomy increases total body perspiration, not decreases it
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11193740
Kopelman D, Assalia A, Ehrenreich M, Ben-Amnon Y, Bahous H, Hashmonai M.
Department of Surgery B, Rambam Medical Center and Faculty of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa.
An ultrastructural study of the effects of right cervical sympathectomy on the sinuatrial and atrioventricular nodes in the heart
S S Tay, W C Wong, and E A Ling
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1165060
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Abnormalities in autonomic cardiovascular control can impair blood supply to the brain
Neurally Mediated Syncope and Syncope Due to Autonomic Failure: Differences and Similarities.
Review Articles
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology. Neurocardiogenic Syncope. 14(3):183-196, May 1997.Kaufmann, Horacio
Cannon phenomenon after sympathectomy
In patients who have had sympathectomy, thermography shows an increase iof temperature in the focus of ephatic nerve damage (Cannon phenomenon) with secondary increase of pain and discomfort.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Centre for Clinical Effectiveness and Monash University
effectiveness of endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy for treating facial
blushing were identified. However, we have identified four case series
related to the request (Drott et al. 1998, Rex et al. 1998, Telaranta 1998,
Yilmaz et al. 1996). These studies were conducted in three countries
(Sweden, Finland and the Netherlands).
• The four case series were not critically appraised because they are prone
to bias and have significant methodological problems. These studies
represent level IV evidence according to the NHMRC criteria and one
should not draw firm conclusions from their findings.
• To date, the benefits or side effects associated with endoscopic thoracic
sympathectomy for treating facial blushing have not been properly
evaluated and reported.
Omar Ahmed PhD
Centre for Clinical Effectiveness
Monash Medical Centre
Locked Bag 29
Clayton VIC 3168
Australia
Acupuncture after sympathectomy?
Dr Simon L Strauss
http://www.pain-education.com/100125.php
Perioperative Thermoregulation
Daniel I. Sesler, M.D.
Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists.
http://www.anzca.edu.au/events/asm/asm2007/Sessler3.htm
Long QT treatment in AU
http://www.sads.org.au/sads_info.html
Saturday, October 11, 2008
sympathectomy highly controversial
of the negative impact of surgical sympathectomy (Furlan, 2001).
Sympathectomy causes changes in the wool growth of sheep
DR Scobie, PI Hynd and BP Setchell
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 45(6) 1159 - 1169
Full text doi:10.1071/AR9941159
© CSIRO 1994
Sympathectomy in the treatment of RSD
Author: H. Hooshmand
Chronic Pain
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
ISBN: 9780849386671
http://www.theaustralian.seekbooks.com.au/popcat.asp?storeURL=theaustralian&CatMain=MED071000&CatSub=MED022000&CatMinor=&PageNo=1&CatMode=2&a=c
Response:
Sympathectomy may provide temporary pain relief, but after a few weeks to months it loses its effect.
http://www.rsdinfo.com/crps_and_sympathectomy.htm
Christine
http://AfflictedWithRSD.com
http://blog.christineleiendecker.com
Sympathectomy also cuts sensory nerves
Thoracoscopic Splanchnicectomy, first proposed by Dr. Lin in 1992, is a lower position of sympathetic procedure. It can relieve abdominal cancer pain originating from Pancreas, Liver, Gall Bladder, Upper GI and right Hemi-colon. Nearly hundred percent of effective pain relief is found especially on the case of pancreatic cancer.
http://www.sweathand.com/four_e.htm
Mia: is there a possibility that people who have undergone sympathectomy will not feel when they are having a heart attack, or feel the pain from internal injury, or stomach ulcers?!
Dr Lin treats these conditions with sympathectomy:
A certain percentage of Angina, Reflex sympathetic dystrophy and pain, Raynaud’s syndrome, Asthma, Schizophrenia, Social phobia, Rhinitis, Migraine, Tremoring disorders, Parkinsonism … can be treated by sympathetic surgery. Stellate Ganglion Block (SGB) is one of the best method for preoperative evaluation, which is the best way to avoid unnecessary sympathetic operation.
Patients receiving treatment for sweaty hands also receive surgery for Hypertension? Are they told that they are also having heart surgery?
http://www.sweathand.com/one_e.htm
Conditions treated by SYMPATHECTOMY
Group 1: Facial Blushing, Tremoring disorder, Rhinitis, Schizophrenia, Parkinsonism, Migraine, Raynaud’s Syndrome, Angina.
Group 2: Facial sweating with or without hand sweating; Facial sweating
and blushing, Hypertension, Angina (Hypertensive cardiac
disease), …
Group 3: Hand sweating with or without axillar sweating.
Group 4: Axillar sweating (Bromidrosis), Myofascial syndrome.
Others: Psychic disorders: Schizophrenia, Social phobia, Upper
abdominal cancer pain from Stomach, Liver, Pancreas, ….;
Plantar Hyperhidrosis.
Dr Lin performed over 6000 surgeries
http://www.sweathand.com/introduce_e.htm
Partial cardiac sympathetic denervation after bilateral thoracic sympathectomy in humans
METHODS: Nine patients with previous upper thoracic sympathectomies (four right-sided, one left-sided, four bilateral) underwent thoracic 6-[18F]fluorodopamine scanning between 1 and 2 hours after injection of the imaging agent. In each case, a low rate of entry of norepinephrine into the arm venous drainage (norepinephrine spillover) verified upper limb sympathectomy. Data were compared with those from the interventricular septum of patients with cardiac sympathetic denervation associated with pure autonomic failure and from normal volunteers. RESULTS: All four patients with bilateral sympathectomy had low septal myocardial 6-[18F]fluorodopamine-derived radioactivity (2,673 +/- 92 nCi-kg/cc-mCi at an average of 89 minutes after injection) compared with normal volunteers (3,634 +/- 311 nCi-kg/cc-mCi at 83 minutes, N = 22, P = .007) and higher radioactivity than in patients with pure autonomic failure (1,320 +/- 300 nCi-kg/cc-mCi at 83 minutes, N = 7, P = .003).
CONCLUSIONS: Bilateral upper thoracic sympathectomy partly decreases cardiac sympathetic innervation density.
Jeffrey P Moak, Basil Eldadah, Courtney Holmes, Sandra Pechnik, David S Goldstein
http://lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:15922266
Holter changes resulting from right-sided and bilateral infrastellate upper thoracic sympathectomy
Pierre Abraham, Jean Berthelot, Jacques Victor, Jean-Louis Saumet, Jean Picquet, Bernard Enon Department of Vascular Investigation and Sports Medicine, University Hospital, Angers, France
Sympathectomy-induced alterations of immunity
Tracy A. Callahan, Jan A. Moynihan and Diane T. Piekut
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
Volume 12, Issue 3, September 1998, Pages 230-241
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WC1-45JK31F-F&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=d3d36bb1041938df0f68d43389b44414
Oxytocin and adrenaline after sympathectomy
J Physiol Vol 192, Issue 1 pp 43-52
Copyright © 1967 by The Physiological Society
| |
http://jp.physoc.org/cgi/content/abstract/192/1/43
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
defects in regulation of heat production, sweat and vasoconstriction - sympathectomy creates the same effect as high level spinal cord lesions
These authors could not correlate the changes in blood flow with changes in blood pressure. Ahmad reported a case of hyperhidrosis with homolateral sympathectomy in whom local
warming of the sympathectomized hand to 41 C caused vasoconstriction, while the nor-
mally innervated hand responded with vasodilation.
Pollock and co-workers observed what they called "defects in regulation of heat production, sweat and vasoconstriction" in patients with spinal cord lesions. They believed these defects to be due to interruption of "impulses from suprasegmental levels." In 1953 Armin, Grant, and co-workers demonstrated increased reactivity to vasoconstrictor stimuli in the denervated rabbit's ear and referred to a similar phenomenon in the human finger after sympathectomy.
The results, however, of studies on surgically sympathectomized patients are quite clearcut.
In none of the limbs studied after sympathectomy could an increase in blood flow be produced reflexly by warming; in the majority of instances the opposite response, a decrease in blood flow, was observed. The regularity with which these carefully sympathectomized limbs fail to respond to a vasodilator stimulus suggests that this procedure might be useful as a test for completeness of sympathectomy.
The vasomotor responses to the Gibbon-Landis procedure (reflex response to warming)
were studied in hemiplegic patients, subjects with "high transection" of the cord, and in
sympathectomized patients. The response in hemiplegic patients was vasodilator in nature
just as in the 3 control groups (young normal subjects, elderly subjects without demonstrable
vascular disease, and patients with arterio-sclerosis). One patient with documented tran-
section of the cord above T5 behaved like subjects after surgical sympathectomy. The differences in response in 3 other paraplegic patients may be due to differences in location
and extent of their cord lesions. Basal blood flow was higher in sympathectomized limbs
than in comparable controls. Of 11 sympathectomized limbs tested for vasodilatation in
response to the Gibbon-Landis procedure, 4 showed no response, while 7 responded with decrease in blood flow (vasoconstriction).
1957;15;518-524 Circulation Dorothy Andrews
WERTHEIMER, ARTHUR J. LEWIS, J. MURRAY STEELE and WALTER REDISCH, FRANCISCO T. TANGCO, LOTHAR
Vasomotor Responses in the Extremities of Subjects with Various Neurologic Lesions: I. Reflex Responses to Warming
Monday, October 6, 2008
CS is a serious complication and a significant number of patients may regret undergoing the operation
Libson S, Kirshtein B, Mizrahi S, Lantsberg L.
Department of Surgery "A," Faculty of Health Sciences, Soroka University Medical Center, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel.
Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech. 2007 Dec;17(6):511-3
same hospital, same team: 51% of the patients claim decreased quality of life
Steiner Z, Cohen Z, Kleiner O, Matar I, Mogilner J.
Department of Pediatric Surgery, Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, PO Box 169, Hadera 38100, Israel.
Pediatr Surg Int. 2008 Mar;24(3):343-7. Epub 2007 Nov 13
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17999068?ordinalpos=1&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_DiscoveryPanel.Pubmed_Discovery_RA&linkpos=1&log$=relatedarticles&logdbfrom=pubmedSunday, October 5, 2008
41% of the patients claim quality of life decreased
J Pediatr Surg. 2007 Jul;42(7):1238-42.
Steiner Z, Kleiner O, Hershkovitz Y, Mogilner J, Cohen Z.
Department of Pediatric Surgery, Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, Hadera 38100, Israel.
CS severe in 35% of patients
We encourage informing patients thoroughly about these side effects before surgery.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2004 Aug ;78 (2):427-31 15276490
Friday, October 3, 2008
T2 results in complete sympathectomy
Annual Review of Physiology
Vol. 6: 365-390 (Volume publication date March 1944)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.ph.06.030144.002053)
The pathophysiology of cervical and upper thoracic sympathetic surgery
T2-T3 ganglionectomy significantly decreases pulse rate and systolic blood pressure, reduces myocardial oxygen demand, increases left ventricular ejection fraction and prolongs Q-T interval. A certain loss of lung volume and decrease of pulmonary diffusion capacity for CO result from sympathectomy. Histomorphological muscle changes and neuro-histochemical and biochemical effects have also been observed.M. Hashmonai1, 2
and D. Kopelman1, 3
(1) Faculty of Medicine, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
http://www.springerlink.com/content/jrcm3h5k8pye9yyu/
Volume 13, Supplement 1 / December, 2003
Clinical Autonomic Research
11 of 72 patients were not able to accept the severe compensatory (reflex) sweating
TREATMENT OF HYPERHIDROSIS
- Lewis P. Stolman MD, FRCP(C)
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School; and the Dermatology and Laser Center of Northern New Jersey, Livingston, New Jersey
Dermatologic Clinics
Volume 16 • Number 4 • October 1998
Exam question:
10. Post-sympathectomy
http://www.fpnotebook.com/CV/Exam/OrthstcHyptnsn.htm
Medial arterial calcification in 93% of patients who underwent sympathectomy
www.springerlink.com/index/EYA170TL7F6HKGVV.pdf - Similar pages - Note this
by ME Edmonds - 2000 - Cited by 45 - Related articles - All 3 versions
Mechanisms of Skeletal Tracer Uptake
normally exposed to tracer are able to take it up. This "hyperemic" phenomenon is seen after
sympathectomy, stroke, fracture, osteomyelitis, and peripheral neuropathies; the counting rate will be less than twice that over normal bone.
Mechanisms of Skeletal Tracer Uptake
N. David Charkes
Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
J Nucl Med 20: 794-795, 1979
Cardiac Supersensitivity after Sympathectomy
Chess-Williams RG, Grassby PF, Culling W, Penny W, Broadley KJ, Sheridan DJ
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol 1985; 329:162-6.
Functional and morphological alterations have been reported in cerebral arteries after cervical sympathectomy
Innervation of the human carotid vessels is supplied by the sympathetic system, originating mainly from the superior cervical ganglion, but also from the inferior. Different methods have demonstrated profuse adrenergic innervation of the cerebral blood vessels and regulation of blood flow by the sympathetic system. Functional and morphological alterations have been reported in cerebral arteries after cervical sympathectomy, but vasospasm pathogenesis after subarachnoid haemorrhage remain controversial.
RESULTS
Histological examinations of surgical specimens confirmed ganglion tissues in all cases.
Table 1 shows mean basilar artery diameters for all groups. There were significant statistical differences between groups.
Effects of cervical sympathectomy on vasospasm induced by meningeal haemorrhage in rabbits
Antônio Tadeu de Souza FaleirosI; Francisco Humberto de Abreu MaffeiII; Luiz Antonio de Lima ResendeIIISympathectomy for Peripheral Arterial Insufficiency?
Effect of Sympathectomy on Blood Flow in Arterial Stenosis *
ALLYN G. MAY, M.D., JAMES A. DE WEESE, M.D., CHARLES G. ROB, M.D.
From the Department of Surgery, University of Rochester School of Medicine and
Dentistry, Rochester 20, New York
sympathectomy improves skin blood flow at the thermoregulatory but not the nutritive level of skin microcirculation
These results indicate that in case of lower limb ischemia, sympathectomy improves skin blood flow at the thermoregulatory but not the nutritive level of skin microcirculation. This may be related to the fact that the thermoregulatory vessels are mainly sympathetically controlled, whereas the nutritive capillaries are mainly controlled by local (nonneural) factors.
François M.H. van Dielen1, Harrie A.J.M. Kurvers1, Ruben Dammers1, Mirjam G.A. oude Egbrink2, Dick W. Slaaf3, Jan H.M. Tordoir1 and Peter J.E.H.M. Kitslaar1
| (1) | Department of General Surgery, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht and University Hospital Maastricht, PO Box 5800, 6202 AZ Maastricht, The Netherlands, NL |
| (2) | Department of Physiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, PO Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands, NL |
| (3) | Department of Biophysics, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, PO Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands, NL |
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Sympathectomy - decreased vascular permeability
Further unpublished experiments seem to support the view that increased blood supply is associated with decreased vascular permeability.
| Research in Experimental Medicine D. Engel1 |
Compensatory Sweating developed in all cases
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Sympathectomy induces novel purinergic sensitivity in sciatic afferents
Chen Y, Zhang YH, Bie BH, Zhao ZQ. Shanghai Institute of Physiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China
Twenty eight percent of the spontaneously active afferent fibers from sciatic nerves in the sympathectomized rats responded to ATP, either with an increase or with a decrease in spontaneous firing. However, none of the fibers from the sciatic nerves in the intact rats was activated by ATP. CONCLUSION: Sympathectomy induces novel purinergic sensitivity in A afferents from sciatic nerve.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11501053
Classification of the surgery by the International Society of Sympathetic Surgeons
Here are the basics of our new classifications:
ESB2 (clamp upper end of T2 only): 2.5%, (in Europe 15%)
Facial blushing, Craniofacial sweating, Some psychic disorders, Rosacea, Vibration disorder (?), Parkinsonism (?)...
ESB3: 2.5%, (in Europe 50%)
Hyperhidrosis Palmaris with Craniofacial sweating, blushing, or any other craniofacial sympathetic disorders
ESB4: 95%, (in Europe 20%)
Hyperhidrosis Palmaris with or without axillary hyperhidrosis (Bromidrosis)
Unilateral ESB: (in Europe 15%)
Social phobia, schizophrenia, sleep disorders, addiction, cardiac arrhythmias
http://www.hyperhidrosis.com/symposium.htm
Mia: If you are not comfortable undergoing the same surgery that treats heart patients and psychiatric disorders (among many), then you are advised to seek other alternative treatment for your condition.
Monday, September 22, 2008
immunoreactivity
immunoreactivity in the cell soma of vagal efferent neurons in the dorsal vagal motor nucleus, but not in the nucleus ambiguous (72). Following
surgical sympathectomy, 28% of the spontaneously active afferent fibers in sciatic nerve responded to ATP, compared with none in intact rats
(343). After nerve injury, P2X4 receptor expression increased strikingly in hyperactive microglia, but not in neurons or astrocytes, in the
ipsilateral spinal cord; this appears to be associated with tactile allodynia (1731 and see sect. XIB9).
The sympathetic nervous system has been shown to modulate macrophage function (331), and
alterations in T- and B-lymphocyte proliferation and differentiation have been described following chemical sympathectomy (1090). Close
contacts between enteric nerves and lymphocytes in mouse intestinal mucosa and submucosa have been reported (402, 630).
Sympathetic and sensory nerves innervate bone, and sympathectomy modifies bone development and resorption (see Ref. 166). ATP, probably
released as a cotransmitter with NE, regulates Ca2+ metabolism in osteoblast-like bone cells (979). Evidence has been presented to demonstrate a
role for the sympathetic nervous system in controlling bone density via leptin that activates hypothalamic nerves, which in turn activate the
sympathetic nerves that innervate osteoblasts. ATP has been shown to inhibit bone formation by osteoblasts and to stimulate bone resorption by osteoclasts .
Physiology and Pathophysiology of Purinergic Neurotransmission
Geoffrey Burnstock
Autonomic Neuroscience Centre, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London, UnitedKingdom
Reccurrence of symptoms in 17.6% patients!
Overall, 88 patients (96.7%) developed compensatory hyperhidrosis, with the mean initial occurrence at 8.2 weeks. The symptoms of compensatory hyperhidrosis progressively worsened to the maximum degree within another 2 weeks after onset (mean 10.3+/-1.83 weeks). In 19 patients (21.6%), symptoms of compensatory hyperhidrosis improved spontaneously within 3 months after sympathectomy (mean 13.3 weeks). Postoperative compensatory hyperhidrosis occurred in 71.4% of patients within the 1st year. Recurrent sweating occurred in only 17.6% of patients. None of these patients required repeated operation. The earliest onset of recurrent sweating was noted at 2 weeks postoperatively by three patients, and the mean initial postoperative reccurrence was 32.7 weeks after surgery.