"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
Sunday, July 26, 2009
contributing to the elevated susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation
We observed that sympathectomy (i) decreased cardiac sympathetic nerve density and norepinephrine level, (ii) reduced the protein expression of Kv4.2, Kv1.4, and Kv channel-interacting protein 2 (KChIP2), (iii) decreased current densities and delayed activation of Ito channels, (iv) reduced the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB), and (v) increased the severity of ventricular fibrillation induced by rapid pacing.
We conclude that chemical sympathectomy downregulates the expression of selective Kv channel subunits and decreases myocardial Ito channel activities, contributing to the elevated susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation.
Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. 86(10): 700–709 (2008)
Sterility following lumbar sympathectomy
J. Reprod. Fertil. (1964) 7, 113-122
Altered Cerebral Blood Flow following Sympathectomy
The Physiology of the Cerebral Circulation (Monographs of the Physiological Society) by M. J. Purves (Hardcover - May 31, 1972)
decrease in resting pulmonary resistance that follows thoracic thoracic sympathectomy
Cardiovascular physiology
By William R. Milnor| New York : Oxford University Press, 1990. |
Sympathetic nervous system control of anti-influenza CD8+ T cell responses
PNAS March 31, 2009 vol. 106 no. 13
Following sympathectomy the basal t-PA activity in plasma was 70% less than controls
In another work on dogs, sympathectomy caused a state similar to atrophic rhinitis in man
Z. Krajina; Z. Poljak
Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 1651-2251, Volume 79, Issue 3, 1975, Pages 172 – 175
Structural changes associated with parotid "degeneration secretion" after post-ganglionic sympathectomy
Cell Tissue Res. 1975 Sep 16;162(1):1-12.
PMID: 1175216 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
acinar degranulation following sympathectomy
J. Physiol. November 15, 2008 586:5537-5547
Cervical sympathectomy inhibits axonal transport of gonadotropin-releasing hormone
Considering the action of colchicine, which inhibits axonal transport, it is suggested that cervical sympathectomy also inhibits axonal transports of GnRH between the GnRH neurons and the median eminence during continuous exposure to light.
Journal of Anesthesia
Volume 10, Number 3 / September, 1996
Calcitonin gene-related peptide and substance P contribute to reduced blood pressure in sympathectomized rats
Sympathectomized rats displayed reductions in blood pressure (BP) and atria norepinephrine levels, whereas NGF levels in the DRG, spleen, and ventricles were increased. Sympathectomy also enhanced CGRP and SP mRNA and peptide content in DRG. Administration of CGRP and SP receptor antagonists increased the BP in sympathectomized rats but not in the controls. Thus sympathectomy enhances sensory neuron CGRP and SP expression that contributes to the BP reduction.
Neurogenic and non-neurogenic inflammation in the rat paw following chemical sympathectomy
Neuroscience. 1991;45(3):761-5.
Neonatal guanethidine sympathectomy caused an 86% depletion of noradrenaline in the paw skin and neurogenic plasma protein extravasation upon antidromic nerve stimulation was impaired. Sensory neuropeptides were unchanged in the skin after neonatal guanethidine and only calcitonin gene-related peptide content was increased in the spinal cord and sciatic nerves. The other observations (i.e. the sensitivity towards heat stimuli, the neurogenic mustard oil inflammation and the non-neurogenic carrageenan oedema) were similar to those observed after neonatal 6-hydroxydopamine treatment.
Sympathectomy exaggerates antihypertensive effect of vasopressin withdrawal
AJP - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, Vol 268, Issue 1 1-H6, Copyright © 1995 by American Physiological Society
plasma levels of natriuretic peptides in response to sympathectomy
http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=17030448
Friday, July 24, 2009
Abolition of sympathetic skin responses following endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy
Muscle & Nerve
Published Online: 7 Dec 1998
cervical sympathectomy resulted in a rapid degeneration in some of the cells in the sinuatrial and atrioventricular nodes
Electrophysiology - effect on the heart
Cardiovascular Research 1982 16(9):524-529; doi:10.1093/cvr/16.9.524
Infra-stellate upper thoracic sympathectomy results in a relative bradycardia during exercise, irrespective of the operated side
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2001;20:1095-1100
Sympathectomy induces adrenergic excitability of cutaneous C-fiber nociceptors
The induction of adrenergic excitability in CPMs by sympathectomy is suggested to be a counterpart to postsympathectomy neuralgia in human beings and a possible part of the mechanism leading to sympathetically related pain states.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Neuroma following nerve injury/surgery
www.tarsaltunnelcenter.com/
Risks during Thoracic Sympathectomy - Surgery not as safe as reported
Thoracic sympathectomy has two other potenital consequences: effect on bronchomotor tone and effect on oxygenation.
During intrathoracic procedures using one-lung ventilation, a right-to-left intrapulmonary shunt is intentionally created (in the form of the nonventilated lung). The ensuing arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) is determined by a complex interaction involving cardiac output, mixed venous oxygen tension, the status of the ventilated lung, size of the shunt, and most significantly, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV).
HPV diverts pulmonary blood flow away from the shunt by vavsoconstriction in the nonventilated lung, and is the principal adaptive defense mechanism against arterial hypoxemia during one-lung ventilation. The cellular mechanism and regulation of HPV, and the possible role of the autonomic nervous system are not completely understood.
The effect of thoracic sympathectomy of HPV is even less well understood. Since potent vasodilators such as nitroprusside antagonize HPV-induced vasoconstriction and lower the arterial oxygen tension, it is reasonable to assume that HPVwill become less effective with thoracic sympathectomy.
Clinical studies have produced conflicting conclusions, most probably because direct measurement of HPV is not possible in human studies, and the surrogate endpoing examined PaO2 is determined not only by HPV, but also by a host of interacting factors, some of which may be affected by the sympathectomy and can not be held constant.
Risk Factor for Neuraxial Anesthesia-Associated Bradycardia:
Block height higher than T5
Younger age
Spinal and Epidural AnesthesiaBy Cynthia Wong |
Publication Date: 2007-01-01 Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL EDUCATION - EUROPE Country of origin: UNITED STATES
Alteration in Cerebral Blood Flow after sympathectomy
Youmans Neurological Surgery, 5th Edition
Publisher: Saunders
Publication Date: 2003-10-10
The angina-relieving effects of sympathetic blockade
The pathogenesis of angina and myocardial infarction pain involves the activation of the afferent sympathetic pathway. A frequent and important consequence of pain (especially when severe) is the `flight or fight' response through activation of sympathetic efferents. The clinical image of the patient with an acute myocardial infarction (cold, clammy, sweaty, anxious, tachycardic) is secondary to this adrenergic activation. Therefore, angina might be regarded as the sensory component of a positive feedback loop, which cannot under these circumstances be conceived as resulting in benefit, and which may be considered to be a maladaption.
The angina-relieving effects of sympathetic blockade might be due to interference with this maladaptive feedback loop, in a similar manner to the way in which adenosine interrupts a re-entrant tachycardia. If such a loop exists, it may partly explain chronic refractory angina and the fact that temporary interruption of this pathway has a prolonged effect on pain14. Beneficial amelioration of angina can be achieved with repeated blocks14. There does not appear to be any predictability in the length of time a patient remains pain-free after successive blocks.
http://www.angina.org/source/pro/symp_block.htm
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Behavioral changes after sympathectomy
J Comp Physiol Psychol 1976; 90:303-16.
Glycogen accumulation in Reissner's membrane following chemical sympathectomy
PMID: 213930 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Role of the ANS in cerebral circulation
Blood Vessels 1974;11:2-31
Sympathectomy alters cranial nerves and cerebral blood flow
Moya-Moya Syndrome
Moya Moya syndrome is a vasculopathy of the cranial arteries, usually the carotids, leading to progressive intracranial occlusion with distal collateral vessels. This is a very frequent cause of pediatric stroke in India(10,11). Children usually present with an acute focal deficit such as hemiplegia, whereas in later years sub-arachnoid hemorrhage is a common presenta-tion. Due to bilateral carotid involvement sometimes alternating hemiplegia is seen. The outcome varies widely without treatment. Moya Moya disease is usually idiopathic, although same radiographic pattern is seen in some patients with sickle cell disease, neuro-fibromatosis, postcranial irradiation and in various other conditions(15). There is no proven treatment of Moya Moya disease. Medical management involves use of aspirin but needs further testing. Surgical treatment involves cervical sympathectomy, intracranial graft of omentum or temporalis muscle and bypass of superficial temporal artery to the middle cerebral artery(34).
http://indianpediatrics.net/feb2000/personal.htm
sympathectomy greatly reduces ventilation
Eur Respir J 1998; 12: 177–184
reduces the amount of adrenaline
A form of surgery that is useful for some people with LQTS. It reduces the amount of adrenaline and its by-products produced and delivered to the heart by certain nerves (the left cervical ganglia). It involves operating on the left neck and removing or blocking these nerves
http://www.sads.org.uk/technical_terms.htm
sympathectomy totally ablates regional spinal cord blood flow
http://ajpheart.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/260/3/H827
Transverse myelitis
Transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder caused by an inflammatory process of the grey and white matter of the spinal cord, and can cause axonal demyelination.In some cases, the disease is presumed to be caused by viral infections or vaccinations and has also been associated with spinal cord injuries, immune reactions, schistosomiasis and insufficient blood flow through spinal cord vessels. Acute myelitis accounts for 4 to 5 percent of all cases of neuroborreliosis.[1] Symptoms include weakness and numbness of the limbs as well as motor, sensory, and sphincter deficits. Severe backpain may occur in some patients at the onset of the disease.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transverse_myelitis
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Parallels with Lobotomy
by Andrew Scull
Answered by Barak Goodman:
The quantitative analysis of lobotomy was meager. The obstacles to a good study of lobotomy were numerous: the patients were often abandoned in mental hospitals and therefore hard to access; controlled studies were of course impossible; and no two patients got the same operation (Freeman's operation was truly "a stab in the dark"). The stigma attached to the operation made it a less than desirable area of research and study. Perhaps the most thorough analysis was done by Freeman himself, who kept in touch with hundreds of his patients and tried to assemble data to support lobotomy's efficacy. I think we have to regard that data as suspect.
Occasionally, after the fact, lawsuits are launched attempting to secure damages for the victims. This occurred in Canada, for instance, after the death of Ewen Cameron, former president of the American, Canadian, and World Psychiatric Associations, and a member of the Nuremberg medical tribunal which had investigated Nazi doctors. Cameron, practicing at McGill University, had experimented with "depatterning" and "psychic driving," extraordinary experiments where, inter alia, he wiped out patients' memories with repeated electroshocks designed to reduce those subjected to them to the status of helpless, incontinent "infants," whose psyches he then purported to rebuild. Cameron at his death was a highly respected figure in his profession. Only after it emerged that much of this work had been secretly supported by the CIA were lawsuits brought, some of which were successful in securing monetary damages for his victims and/or their families. Whether money could ever adequately compensate for what has been done, for suicides and ruined lives, is very doubtful, as I'm sure you would agree. But the legal acknowledgement of the depth of the wrong that has been wrought is, of course, worth something.
Andrew Scull
My father was aiming to disconnect the thalamus from the frontal cortex
The positive(sic!) consequences of cutting between thalamus and frontal cortex were loss of fear and anxiety. The negative consequences of cutting were loss of social inhibition (loss of guilt, shame, fear of disapproval) and loss of the ability to think ahead (no ambition, eating to excess, inability to read the minds of others).
" People who start taking Prozac, Miltown, or other tranquilizers no longer suffer anxiety and fear of the future, but they lose ambition, libido, and the capacity for deep feelings. That is the cost of treatment. Neither surgery nor drugs cure the mental illness. They only relieve the suffering, and the cost is high.
Most patients who are not suffering too much prefer to continue to suffer than to accept the loss. Other patients suffer so intensely that they kill themselves rather than continue living.
Walter Freeman III
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/lobotomist/forum/day2.html
Lobotomy lauded as a successful surgery. History repeating itself?
The surgery did what scientists said it did; the question is why did they judge this to be a good thing for those said to be mentally ill? It was that evaluation process that provided a context for Freeman and others to do the surgery.
So, could something like this happen today? Could psychiatry -- or some other branch of medicine -- adopt a form of care that we would later come to see as harmful? The history of medicine certainly warns us that doctors can be deluded about the merits of their therapies, and today that whole decision-making process is greatly influenced by pharmaceutical companies' money, which only increases the possibility of medicine going astray. The lobotomy story really should remind us of that possibility.
Robert Whitaker
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/lobotomist/forum/day1.htmlOrthodeoxia
P V van Heerden, P D Cameron, A Karanovic, M A Goodman. Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. Edgecliff:Oct 2003. Vol. 31, Iss. 5, p. 581-3
We present a case of orthodeoxia (postural hypoxaemia) which resulted from a combination of lung collapse/consolidation and blunted hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction due to partial interruption of the sympathetic nerve supply to the lung by bilateral thoracic sympathectomy.
Less common associations with orthodeoxia are atypical pneumonia3, trauma8, organophosphate poisoning10 and progressive autonomic failure12.
The surgical procedure, which interrupted both sympathetic trunks, probably resulted in "sympathectomy" of the lung with consequent vasoplegia of the pulmonary circulation and blunting of the HPV response.
The combination of areas of reduced ventilation in the lung, together with blunted HPV, resulted in profound oxygen desaturation in our patient when she sat up in bed.
As antibiotics and chest physiotherapy improved the collapse/consolidation of the lungs, the patient became less dependent on artificial means of maintaining pulmonary vascular tone, so that the noradrenaline and then the almitrine could be weaned without incident. Presumably there will be some return of sympathetic tone to the pulmonary circulation with time.
It was not the intention of the authors to describe all the physiological consequences of thoracotomy or thoracoscopy, with or without one-lung ventilation, in this short communication. Clearly these procedures on their own can have significant effects on lung physiology, quite apart from the unique confluence of factors producing orthodeoxia in the patient presented in this case report.
Strong parallels with Lobotomy - What has changed?
Freeman's operation reflected the neurologist's peculiar combination of zealotry, talent, hubris and, as one of his trainees noted, craziness.
Undaunted by his failures, Freeman's pitch that lobotomy cured mental illness was seized on by the press -- the Washington Star called it among "the greatest innovations of this generation," and the New York Times pronounced it "history-making." Many doctors embraced it as a 10-minute operation that promised to empty mental hospitals and return patients to their families. Opponents, mostly psychiatrists who practiced Freudian talk therapy, didn't matter much: In those days public criticism of a doctor by his peers was regarded as unethical.
The story of how Freeman sold his procedure to credulous colleagues, assiduously courted the press and convinced desperate families that sticking an ice pick through a patient's upper eye sockets and twirling it like a swizzle stick through brain matter would cure psychosis, depression or troublesome behavior is the ultimate in cautionary medical tales.
The issue at the heart of this powerful and unsettling film is not, as one writer puts it, "how a man could go off the rails, but how science could go off the rails."
'Lobotomist' Serves as a Warning
Documentary Shows Damage Done When Medicine Goes Awry
Washington Post Staff WriterTuesday, January 15, 2008; Page HE01
Friday, July 3, 2009
Changes in cerebral capillary bed
Tracy J. Putnam
The Cerebral Circulation: Some New Points in its Anatomy, Physiology and Pathology
J Neurol Psychopathol, Jan 1937; s1-17: 193 - 212.
Permeability and Sympathetic Nervous System
J Neurol Psychiatry, Apr 1941; 4: 147 - 162.
Observations during lobotomy applied to patients for treatment of palmar sweating
Alick Elithorn, Malcolm F. Piercy, and Margaret A. Crosskey
A PERSISTING CHANGE IN PALMAR SWEATING FOLLOWING PREFRONTAL LEUCOTOMY
Increased sensitivity to insulin following sympathectomy
| E. Marley ALTERED RESPONSE TO SMALL DOSES OF INSULIN ASSOCIATED WITH ELECTROPLEXY AND HYPOGLYCAEMIC THERAPIES J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, Feb 1956; 19: 57 - 61. |
Sprouting following sympathectomy- recurrence of symptoms
G. F. M. Russell
J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, Nov 1958; 21: 290 - 296.
Auto-regulation after sympathectomy
Oedema associated with the interruption of preganglionic sympathetic tract
J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry, Mar 1992; 55: 232 - 233.
Dilation of major cerebral arteries and cranial noncerebral vasodilation following sympathectomy
Headache. 43(4):410-414, April 2003.
Spierings, Egilius L. H. MD, PhD
Abstract:
Background: A patient developed severe, continuous, unilateral headache that was "vascular" in nature, following cervical sympathectomy.
Objective: To determine the changes in cranial blood flow in the cat following lesioning and stimulation of the cervical sympathetic nerve.
Method: Carotid blood flow was determined by electromagnetic flowmetry and its tissue distribution by intra-arterial injection of 15-[mu]m radioactive microspheres.
Results: Following sympathetic lesioning, an increase in carotid blood flow was observed and reversed with stimulation. The distribution of carotid blood flow changed for the brain only, maintaining relatively constant tissue perfusion.
Conclusion: An increase in cerebral blood flow could not have accounted for the sympathectomy-induced headache. Dilation of major cerebral arteries and cranial noncerebral vasodilation probably constitutes its mechanism.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
pituitary secretions of ACTH and TSH after sympathectomy
Cervical sympathectomy affects adrenocorticotropic hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone in rats
| Journal | Journal of Anesthesia |
| Publisher | Springer Japan |
| ISSN | 0913-8668 (Print) 1438-8359 (Online) |
| Issue | Volume 10, Number 3 / September, 1996 |
The present results suggest that cervical sympathectomy in the rat increases ACTH secretion and decreases TSH secretion in the pituitary. These effects seem to be due to a mildly increased secretion of melatonin in the pineal body that probably in turn increases corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) secretion and decreases thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) secretion in the hypothalamus. Extrapolation of these findings to humans suggests that longterm and repeated stellate ganglion block would affect the pituitary secretions of ACTH and TSH.
Friday, June 26, 2009
remarkable changes in the nerves that remain
Sympathectomy. Unilateral removal of the SCG results in the reinnervation of the denervated cerebral vessel by sprouting nerves from the contralateral ganglion (Kahrstrom et al. 1986). Following chronic guanethidine sympathectomy there is a complete depletion of sympathetic cotransmitters NA and NPY from the dura mater but an increase in the expression of NPY in non-sympathetic axons (lacking small dense-cored vesicles) supplying cerebral vessels and the iris (Mione at al. 1990). The source of increased cerebrovasular NPY is thought to be preexisting parasympathetic cranial ganglia which normally express both NPY and VIP (Gibbins and Morris 1998).
Indeed, sympathectomy-induced DBH-immunoreactivity in the sphenopalatine (parasympathetic) ganglion occurs at the same time as a loss of VIP-immunoreactivity (Fan and Smith 1993). In the cerebral and uterine artery, loss of sympathetic nerves also leads to increased DBH-immunoreactivity in non-sympathetic nerves that lack TH and NA (Morris et al. 1991).
The loss of sympathtetic neurones and nerve fibres is also accompanied by striking increases in sensory innervation. This has been attributed to increased availability to NGF (as there are no sympathetic nerves with which to compete for uptake) which promotes the growth of sensory nerves (Kessler et al. 1983)
In the lung, sympathectomy induced a marked increase in CGRP-immunoreactive nerve density around the airways, and blood vessels.
Category: Neurology & Clinical Neurophysiology
Publication Date: 1999-12-16 Publisher: Elsevier - Health Sciences Div
Ultrastructural changes in the pineal gland
H. J. Romijn1
| (1) | Present address: Department of Electron Microscopy, Netherlands Central Institute for Brain Research, Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
Received: 3 March 1975
Denervated heart does not respons as effectively as it should
Denervated involuntary muscles, cardiac muscle, and glands continue to function. For example, the transplanted heart may function reasonably well. However, when deprived of autonomic nervous system influences, these effectors are abnormal in that they do not respond as effectively as they should to satisfy the changind demands of the organism.
The Human Nervous System
Structure and FunctionMia: Please note, that with heart transplants both, sympathetic and parasympathetic influences are disrupted , so while there is denervation, there is no obvious imbalance between these. In sympathectomy, only the sympathetic nerves are cut, and the parasympathetic influence is predominant, whic will result in slowing of the heart.
Reduced Heart Rate Variability and Increased C-reacitve protein - predicts death and myocardial infarction
Conclusions: The combination of CRP and HRV or heart rate (HR) predicts death and myocardial infarction with synergism, indicating interaction between inflammatory and autonomic systems with a prognostic significance.
Journal of Internal Medicine. 260(4):377-387, October 2006.
SAJADIEH, A. 1; NIELSEN, O. W. 1; RASMUSSEN, V. 2; HEIN, H. O. 3; HANSEN, J. F. 1
| |
Sympathectomy is known to alter immunity
The stress induced by autonomic dysregulation after SCI, and especially by episodes of autonomic dysreflexia, may well be an important cause of immune suppression in this group.
Neurologic events are known to affect immunologic function indirectly, through the pituitary adrenal axis, and through endocrine and neuropeptide regulation. Stress induces the release of adrenocorticotrophic hormone from the pituitary. This induces the release of immuno-suppressive glucocorticoids. In addition, the adrenal medulla releases catecholamines that alter leukocyte migration and lymphocyte responsiveness. Other hormones, including insulin, thyroxin, growth hormones, samostatin, and the sex hormones modulate T- and B-cell functions in complex ways. A number of abnormalities in endocrine function accompany SCI. Abnormal endocrine physiology involving sex hormones, aldosterone, catecholamines, and methylhydroxymandelic acid have been described.
Spinal Cord Medicine: Principles and Practice Spinal Cord Medicine: Principles and practiceby Vernon W. Lin, Diana D. Cardenas, Nancy C., MD Cutter,
Published by Demos Medical Publishing, LLC. 2002
efficacy ranging from 13% to 80% ?
Lumbar sympathetic blockade is indicated for diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy of painful and other conditions presumably associated with sympathetic nervous system dysfunction. Anatomy of the lumbar sympathetic chain and the rationale for the block are essential to know before performing the block. Different techniques have been described for the lumbar sympathetic blockade, with efficacy ranging from 13% to 80%, which varies according to the initial patient pathology. Genito-femoral neuralgia occurs in about 5% of patients after neurolytic block. Other potential complications are infection, hematomas, and somatic nerve damage. Copyright © 2001 by W.B. Saunders Company
Techniques in Regional Anesthesia and Pain Management, Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 99-101
N.Mekhail, O.Malak
cervical sympathectomy resulted in a rapid degeneration in some of the cells in the sinuatrial and atrioventricular nodes
J Anat. 1984 October; 139(Pt 3): 449–461. | PMCID: PMC1165060 |
Cervical sympathectomy causes photoreceptor-specific cell death in the rat retina
Autonomic Neuroscience, Volume 120, Issue 1, Pages 46-51
J. Steinle, N. Lindsay, B. Lashbrook
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Interview with Dr Telaranta
to CS or other factors & have there been adequate studies on the long term
effects of ETS on cardiac, skin function, etc..?
-My opinion is, that during time the past slowly gets into oblivion, the patients don’t remember any more the original situation. Also, I believe that the first hype of enthusiasm goes away with the central nervous system getting used to the new situation. It may even be that the initial effect on the thalamic structures is some kind of euphoric hybris due to the sudden increase of the serotonine-like overflow.
http://www.angelfire.com/journal2/sadhelp/Interview1.htm
Science 3 September 1971: |
Serum Dopamine-
-Hydroxylase: Decrease after Chemical Sympathectomy
1 Pharmacology-Toxicology Program, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20014
2 Laboratory of Clinical Science, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20014
Dopamine-- hydroxylase is an enzyme that is localized to catecholamine-containing vesicles in sympathetic nerves and the adrenal medulla, and is also found in the serum. Treatment of rats with 6-hydroxydopamine, a drug which destroys sympathetic nerve terminals, leads to a decrease in serum dopamine-
-hydroxylase activity. The decrease is not due to an effect on the adrenal medulla or to an increase in circulating inhibitor or inhibitors of enzyme. These data represent evidence that at least a portion of the circulating dopamine-
-hydroxylase activity arises from sympathetic nerve terminals.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
abnormal heart rate recovery predicts death
Measurements: Heart rate recovery was defined as the change from peak heart rate to that measured 2 minutes later (heart rate recovery was defined as 42 beats/min).
Results: During 12 years of follow-up, 312 participants died. Abnormal heart rate recovery predicted death (relative risk, 2.58 [CI, 2.06 to 3.20]). After adjustment for standard risk factors, fitness, and resting and exercise heart rates, abnormal heart rate recovery remained predictive (adjusted relative risk, 1.55 [CI, 1.22 to 1.98]) (P <>
Conclusion: Even after submaximal exercise, abnormal heart rate recovery predicts death.
4 April 2000 | Volume 132 Issue 7 | Pages 552-555
The thermoregulatory control of human skin blood flow is vital to the maintenance of normal body temperatures
Raynaud phenomenon and erythromelalgia represent cutaneous microvascular disorders
whose pathophysiology appears to relate to disorders of local and/or reflex
thermoregulatory control of the skin circulation.
© 2003 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
Cerebral Blood Flow after Sympathectomy
Hematology Week. Atlanta: Dec 29, 2008. pg. 430
Changes in cerebral morphology consequent to peripheral autonomic denervation
Critchley, H.D. and Good, C.D. and Ashburner, J. and Frackowiak, R.S. and Mathias, C.J. and Dolan, R.J. (2003) Changes in cerebral morphology consequent to peripheral autonomic denervation. NeuroImage, 18 (4). pp.908 - 916. ISSN 10538119
Saturday, June 20, 2009
blockade of the sympathetic nervous system substantially degrades ligament
Clinically, chemical inhibition of the PNS is used to manage joint pain. Chemical blockade of the sympathetic nervous system is often accomplished through the administration of guanethidine. Guanethidine blocks the release and subsequent reuptake of norepinephrine (NE) (a major sympathetic neurotransmitter) in patients with osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and reflex sympathetic dystrophy (12, 13, 24, 38, 40). This treatment, while effective in relieving pain, may have undesirable effects on connective tissues, because it alters the normal concentration of neurogenic factors.
Growing anatomic and physiological evidence suggest that the PNS is important to ligament and joint homeostasis.Denervation of peripheral nerves leads to decreased healing of the MCL and promotes the onset of osteoarthritis (22, 34). Partial injury to the MCL can lead to increases in vascular volume, a factor that is largely controlled by ligament innervation (7). During periods of chronic overuse or disuse, homeostatic changes can be detrimental to the structural integrity of ligaments. Although the above evidence suggests that peripheral nerves play an essential role in ligament homeostasis, few studies exist that directly investigate this role.
J Appl Physiol 96: 711-718, 2004
- Muscle Nerve. 1996 May;19(5):581-6.Links
-
Abolition of sympathetic skin responses following endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy.
Department of Physiology, Henri Mondor Hospital, Creteil, France.
Sympathectomy eliminates the psychogalvanic reflex
- Anaesth Intensive Care. 1979 Nov;7(4):353-7.Links
-
Assessment of sympathectomy--the skin potential response.
Objective assessment of the results of surgical sympathectomy and sympathetic block (both temporary and permanent) are not widely practised. This article comments briefly on the available methods, and describes the use of the abolition of the skin potential response (formerly known as the psychogalvanic reflex) to assess the abolition of sympathetic function. This method of assessment has proved useful in clinical practice.
PMID: 525760 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Sympathectomy listed as Neurologic disorder
• Idiopathic orthostatic hypotension
• Multiple sclerosis
• Parkinsonism
• Shy-Drager syndrome
• Spinal cord injury with paraplegia
• Surgical sympathectomy
• Syringomyelia
• Syringobulbia
• Tabes dorsales (syphilis)
• Wernicke's encephalopathy
Dizziness in Orthopaedic Physical Therapy Practice: Classification
and Pathophysiology
Peter Huijbregts, PT, MSc, MHSc, DPT, OCS, MTC, FAAOMPT, FCAMT
Paul Vidal, PT, MHSc, DPT, OCS, MTC
The Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy
Vol. 12 No. 4 (2004), 199 - 214
Fifty-one percent of the participants claimed that their quality of life decreased
Comment from CSMESS: Half of patients felt their quality of life was lowered by the surgery! Half! One out of three patients regretted the surgery!! Worse yet, they try to make that out to be a surprisingly low percentage by stating the statistic as "only one-third".
"Only"?? Are you kidding me? Since when is having one third of your patients end up worse off after a permanent, destructive nerve surgery considered a surprisingly good result?
How can a surgery for a benign condition -- a surgery performed for the sole purpose of increasing quality of life -- be considered justified when over half of the patients end up with lower quality of life?
And then on top of it all, they recommend ETS for children -- creatures whose minds and bodies have not fully developed -- based on the answers these children give to questions posed by adult authority figures? Doctors, no less.
I guess I should be happy they published these numbers. I believe that they are representative of reality in terms of the percentage of people who end up with lower quality of life from ETS. It's a far cry from the "5% get bad side effects" crap that most prospective patients are told in order to get them to have the surgery. Still, it is unfathomable to me that an article citing a lowering of quality of life for half the patients and a third regretting the surgery can be spun positively. (http://etsandreversals.yuku.com/directory)
*Pediatr Surg Int. 2007 Nov 13 [Epub ahead of print] Links
Do children tolerate thoracoscopic sympathectomy better than adults?Steiner Z, Cohen Z, Kleiner O, Matar I, Mogilner J.
Department of Pediatric Surgery, Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, P. O. Box 169, Hadera, 38100, Israel, steiner@hy.health.gov.il.
Effects of stellate ganglion block on cerebral haemodynamics as assessed by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography
1 Department of Neuroanaesthesiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (A.I.I.M.S.), New Delhi, India. 2 University Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham, UK
* Corresponding author. E-mail: pkbithal@hotmail.com
Accepted for publication July 11, 2005.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Relationship of cerebral bloodflow and metabolism to neurological symptoms
This is manifested by the following rheoencephalographic findings: steep rise of the anacrotic section of the curve, high amplitude, sharp peak, overt incisure with low localization (in the lower third of the curve or very close to the baseline), prominent post-incisure wave. These rheoencephalographic changes may be observed after inhalation of 5 to 7% CO2 or cervical sympathectomy (Jenkner, 1962), resulting in dilation of the cerebral vessels. Analogous deviations may be induced by vasodilative drugs.
UnderThese signs of reduced cerebral vascular tone may be observed alsi in a variety of pathologic conditions associated with cerebral hyperemia, such as contusion of the brain (Jenkner, 1962), following electroshock (Lifshitz. 1963) and others.
It has to push us to publish our works, to inform the medical corps, relentlessly and without restraint
Clinical Autonomic Research. New York:Apr 2007. Vol. 17, Iss. 2, p. 126-44 (19 pp.)
Pity colleagues, pity for these poor patients!
Gross Michel* Institution: Private Cabinet*; Grone - Switzerland
A desperate 22-year-old man comes to consult and tells me about his idea of committing suicide. Since the age of 9, he suffers from a severe cephalic ephidrosis, with blushing face, intensifying with years, to such an extent that it became unbearable over the last year:
''It is a real Calvary''. His family GP assures him that his troubles are going to disappear as he will get older and ''ut aliquid fieri'' he prescribes sage drops and anxiolytic. As these prescriptions do not improve his situation, his GP sends him to an endocrinologist who performs many exams to exclude an hyperthyreosis, a carcinoıd tumor or a pheochromocytoma. Among the considerable number of blood exams, one appears to be out of normal ranges. The patient goes therefore to an haematologist, who does not find anything
abnormal. A neurologist, then consulted, does not suspect anything in particular, but asks however for some radiology exams, including a brain MRI, as well as a Pet-scan, to exclude an adrenal gland tumor. All these exams being normal, the patient is sent to a behaviour therapist to begin a psychotherapy. Exhausted by the
weight of these useless consultations here and there, our young patient, always seeking for the solution to his problems, decides to turn to an acupuncturist, an osteopath, a healer and a radiesthesist, in vain. He then decides to consult a dermatologist and shares with him a summary of information gathered on Internet, including information from my site. Finally, the patient was referred to me.
Aware of that, the GP warns his colleagues by sending a letter indicating that any therapeutic measure other than psychotherapy is not recommended, considering the surgical alternative as irresponsible. I did by the way, not get any call from any of my colleagues. The patient had successful surgery 2 weeks later
(sympathicotomy T2-3-4-5) This recent history redraws, once again, iatrogenic caricatural wandering to which our patients are too often subjected. It has to push us to publish our works, to inform the medical corps, relentlessly and without restraint. The information could also, throughout the public, reach our colleagues. It is at the end an interesting paradox to note that physicians, whose primary role is to relieve patients, are also the primary actors of a film where patients are maintained in a ''medical jail''.
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Effects of endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy for primary hyperhidrosis on cardiac autonomic nervous activity.
Service of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Hospital de Santa Maria, Lisbon, Portugal. costacruzjorge@gmail.com
- We found statistically significant differences (P < .05) in both time and frequency domains. Parameters that evaluate global cardiac autonomic activity (total power, SD of normal R-R intervals, SD of average normal R-R intervals) and vagal activity (rhythm corresponding to percentage of normal R-R intervals with cycle greater than 50 ms relative to previous interval, square root of mean squared differences of successive normal R-R intervals, high-frequency power, high-frequency power in normalized units) were statistically significantly increased after sympathectomy. Low-frequency power in normalized units, reflecting sympathetic activity, was statistically significantly decreased after sympathectomy. Low-/high-frequency power ratio also showed a significant decrease, indicating relative decrease in sympathetic activity and increase in vagal activity.
These results provide, for the first time to our knowledge, clear evidence of increased vagal and global cardiac autonomic activity and decreased sympathetic activity after endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy.
PMID: 19258086 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Changes in cerebral morphology consequent to peripheral autonomic denervation
| | Our findings suggest that peripheral autonomic denervation ( ETS= peripheral autonomic denervation) is associated with grey matter loss in cortical regions encompassing areas that we have previously shown are functionally involved in generation and representation of bodily states of autonomic arousal. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12725766
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Thursday, June 11, 2009
Emotion - Autonomic activation - Feedback
blood pressure and sudomotor activity, which are associated with
changes in regional cerebral activity, feedback to influence the
expression of emotional feelings. In spinal cord injury (SCI), the
efferent generation of sympathetic responses and afferent sensory
feedback of visceral state is impaired, and the integration of bodily
arousal and emotion is altered.
During conditioning-related brain
activity SCI patients, compared to controls, showed attenuation of
subgenual cingulate, ventromedial prefrontal and posterior cingu-
late cortex activity and enhancement of dorsal anterior cingulate,
periaqueductal grey matter and superior temporal gyrus activity.
Conclusion. Our findings suggest impairment in emotion-related
generation of autonomic bodily responses and abnormalities in
brain regions associated with emotional control in patients with
SCI. These early findings warrant further development to support
prevention of emotional dysfunction in SCI.
Clin Auton Res (2007) 17:264–327
Bradycardia likely, compensatory sweating obligatory
Clinical Autonomic Research; Dec2003 Supplement 1, Vol. 13, p0, 1p