Anaesthetic implications for transthoracic endoscopic sympathectomy.
PMID: 7524779 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Eur J Surg Suppl. 1994;(572):33-6.
"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
PMID: 7524779 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Eur J Surg Suppl. 1994;(572):33-6.
Autonomic dysreflexia - Spinal cord injuries (SCI) above T6 may be complicated by a phenomenon known as autonomic dysreflexia, a manifestation of the loss of coordinated autonomic responses to demands on heart rate and vascular tone [5,6]. Uninhibited or exaggerated sympathetic responses to noxious stimuli lead to diffuse vasoconstriction and hypertension. A compensatory parasympathetic response produces bradycardia and vasodilation above the level of the lesion, but this is not sufficient to reduce elevated blood pressure. SCI lesions lower than T6 do not produce this complication, because intact splanchnic innervation allows for compensatory dilatation of the splanchnic vascular bed.
The estimated frequency of this complication is quite variable, ranging from 20 to 70 percent of patients with SCI lesions above T6 [5,6]. Autonomic dysreflexia is unusual within the first month of SCI but usually appears within the first year [7,8].
Common clinical manifestations are headache, diaphoresis, and increased blood pressure [7]. Flushing, piloerection, blurred vision, nasal obstruction, anxiety, and nausea may also occur. Bradycardia is common; however, some patients have tachycardia instead. The severity of attacks ranges from asymptomatic hypertension to hypertensive crisis complicated by profound bradycardia and cardiac arrest or intracranial hemorrhage and seizures. The severity of the SCI influences both the frequency and severity of attacks.
CAD mortality also appears to be higher among SCI patients [4]. One contributing factor may be that SCI lesions above the T5 level may lead to atypical presentations for cardiac ischemia; manifestations may include autonomic dysreflexia or changes in spasticity rather than typical chest pain.
The autonomic nervous system dysfunction that results from SCI disrupts normal cardiovascular hemostasis. With SCI above the T6 level, baseline blood pressure is usually reduced, and baseline heart rate may be as low as 50 to 60 beats per minute [12,16]. This is generally not a clinical problem, but may contribute to hemodynamic instability and exercise intolerance.
Acute cervical SCI is associated with a risk of cardiac arrhythmia due to excess vagal tone, as well as complicating hypoxia, hypotension, and fluid and electrolyte imbalances.
http://www.uptodate.com/patients/content/topic.do?topicKey=~VwAwFq7EG6jGfV
Palmar hyperhidrosis, probably caused by an over-reactivity of sympathetic
Exp Clin Cardiol. 2003 Spring; 8(1): 31–32. | PMCID: PMC2716198 |
| Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | |
| Publisher | Birkhäuser Basel |
| ISSN | 1420-682X (Print) 1420-9071 (Online) |
| Issue | Volume 36, Number 7 / July, 1980 |
| Zeitschrift für Kardiologie | |
| Publisher | Steinkopff |
| ISSN | 0300-5860 (Print) 1435-1285 (Online) |
| Issue | Volume 89, Number 14 / February, 2000 |
| DOI | 10.1007/s003920070107 |
Clin Auton Res. 2007 April; 17(2): 69–76. Published online 2006 November 14. doi: 10.1007/s10286-006-0379-7. | PMCID: PMC1858602 |
Rosemary D. Bevan, Hiromichi Tsuru
Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Calif.
Address of Corresponding Author
Blood Vessels 1979;16:109-112 (DOI: 10.1159/000158197)
A Systematic Literature Review of Late Complications
Andrea Furlana,c MD, Angela Mailisa,bMD, MSc, FRCPC
Published Online: 22 Jun 2005
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119584269/abstract
| Alan E. P. Cameron |
| Abstract |
See Also:
Published Online: 2 Dec 2003
The 4th International Symposium on Sympathetic Surgery was held in Finland in June 2001, and was attended by the world’s most renowned ETS surgeons, including its Chairman, Dr. Timo Telaranta. Louis Stein of Surgical Team was there to listen to the experts.
· International Society for Sympathetic Surgery founded
International Society for Sympathetic Surgery was founded during the Symposium. It has a council of five members:
- Dr. Christer Drott from Sweden - The Society’s first Chairman
- Dr. Christoph Schick from Germany
- Dr. Timo Telaranta from Finland
- Dr. Chien-Chih Lin from Taiwan
- Dr. Moshe Hashmonai from Israel
Dr. Alan Cameron from England joined as an English language expert, especially for the revision of the by-laws.
TECHNICAL REVIEW: Standard of Care - Diabetic Autonomic Neuropathy
Aaron I. Vinik, MD, PHD; Braxton D. Mitchell, PHD
Raelene E. Maser, PHD; Roy Freeman, MD
With normal aging, thermoregulatory sweat output declines due to peripheral neural and eccrine glandular factors, which vary in degree depending on genetic predisposition and level of physical conditioning.[75] Extensive anhidrosis may also accompany disease of the peripheral nervous system. When exposed to an elevated ambient temperature or physical exercise, these individuals may present with symptoms of heat intolerance, dizziness, weakness, flushing, dyspnea, or palpitations and may be at risk for heat exhaustion and hyperthermia.
Distal anhidrosis, although often subclinical, is detectable by clinical sudomotor testing in many patients with peripheral neuropathy.[76,77] Diabetes mellitus, the most common cause of autonomic neuropathy in the developed world, typically impairs thermoregulatory sweating in a stocking and glove distribution.[78] As the neuropathy progresses, asymmetric truncal anhidrosis or global anhidrosis may develop.[76]
Some immune-mediated neuropathies selectively target the autonomic neuron. Autoimmune autonomic neuropathy typically presents with sicca complex, anhidrosis, gastrointestinal hypomotility, orthostatic hypotension, abnormal pupillary light reflexes, and neurogenic bladder that may be subacute or insidious in onset. Autoantibodies to the ganglionic acetylcholine receptor have been demonstrated in these patients.[29,79,80] Subacute autonomic neuropathy may signal an occult malignancy, most commonly small cell lung carcinoma. The dysautonomia in paraneoplastic autonomic neuropathy can be manifested mainly by cholinergic failure presenting as gastrointestinal dysfunction and anhidrosis.
Hypohidrosis commonly occurs in the autonomic neuropathy associated with Sjögren's syndrome.[83,84] Hypohidrosis also accompanies neuropathies due to amyloidosis, alcoholism, Tangier disease, vasculitis, and Fabry's disease.[85] Focal areas of hypohidrosis may be found in patients with leprosy.[86]
Anhidrosis is a prominent feature of hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies type IV and V (congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis), in which absent skin innervation is associated with mutations of the NTRK1 gene encoding the neurotrophic tyrosine kinase receptor type 1.[30]
CONCLUSION: Transthoracic endoscopic sympathectomy is an effective and simple modality to treat palmar hyperhidrosis. However, all patients need to be warned of the common complications, particularly compensatory hyperhidrosis, before surgery.
Some P.G.R. studies in a female subject who had bilateral cervical sympathectomy were described. It was found that sympathectomy abolished P.G.R. and that intra-arterial infusion of acetylcholine evoked marked P.G.R. changes in the sympathectomized limb. These findings support the theory that the P.G.R. is mediated through the cholinergic fibres of the sympathetic nervous system.
Submitted on May 22, 1967School of Psychology, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia. drummond@central.murdoch.edu.au
Allostasis is the process of achieving stability, or homeostasis, through physiological or behavioral change. This can be carried out by means of alteration in HPA axis hormones, the autonomic nervous system, cytokines, or a number of other systems, and is generally adaptive in the short term [1]
| New York : Oxford University Press, 1990. |
PMID: 1175216 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]