Cell body reorganization in the spinal cord after elective surgery to treat sweaty palms

The amount of compensatory sweating depends on the patient, the damage that the white rami communicans incurs, and the amount of cell body reorganization in the spinal cord after surgery.
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

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Sympathectomy (ETS) a psychosurgery?

Financial Review - News Store: "It's not unusual to hear people who have undergone sympathectomies describe themselves as feeling emotionally "colder" than before. Among psychologists and neurologists alike there is concern, but no evidence, that the procedure limits alertness and arousal as well as fear, and might affect memory, empathy and mental performance. Professor Ronald Rapee, the director of the Centre of Emotional Health at Sydney's Macquarie University, says he's counselled several people who complain of feeling "robot-like" in the long-term wake of the operation. "They're happy they no longer blush, but they miss the highs and lows they used to feel.""



'via Blog this'

Dr. Telaranta treating fear, stuttering, stage fright, blushing with sympathectomy. Is ETS a psychosurgery?

Dr. Telaranta | Blog by Dr. Telaranta: "As a treatment, sympathetic blocking could be effective. Fortunately one can test whether it’ll have an effect, to a pretty high level of certainty, by first administering a temporary block t. Sympathetic block is usually effective in reducing all types of fear, why not also in reducing the fear of stuttering.

Sympathetic block typically has the highest likelihood of effective results on both schizophrenia and tremor when fear or anxiety plays a significant part in the onset of symptoms. It is also very effective in treating social phobia, stage fright and blushing. A stage fright-like fear of public presentations is likely common amongst those who stutter."



http://www.sympatix.fi/blog/?lang=en_

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

"We quickly discovered that lay people often lack the (medical) knowledge to make well-considered judgements"

Jane McCredie: Wishing on risks

MjaInsight Monday, 11 November, 2013
Moreover, GPs and plastic surgeons can both be approached directly by patients in The Netherlands. The physicians studied raised many arguments that were expected: they used patient autonomy, risks and benefits, normality and justice to limit wish-fulfilling medicine. In addition, arguments new to this debate were uncovered, which were frequently used to justify compliance with a patient's request. Such arguments seem familiar from conventional medicine, including empathy, the patient–doctor relationship and reassurance. Moreover, certain arguments that play a significant role in the literature on wish-fulfilling medicine and enhancement were not mentioned, such as concepts of disease and the enhancement–treatment dichotomy and ‘suspect norms’.

"We quickly discovered that lay people often lack the (medical) knowledge to make well-considered judgements"

Monday, February 17, 2014

The sympathetic system is responsible for the physiological responses to emotional states

The common epithet of “fight or flight” is being enlarged to be “fight, flight, or fright” or even “fight, flight, fright, or freeze.” Cannon’s original contribution was a catchy phrase to express some of what the nervous system does in response to a threat, but it is incomplete. The sympathetic system is responsible for the physiological responses to emotional states. The name “sympathetic” can be said to mean that (sym- = “together”; -pathos = “pain,” “suffering,” or “emotion”).
http://cnx.org/content/m46582/latest/?collection=col11496/latest

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Following a peripheral nerve injury, a sterile inflammation develops in sympathetic and dorsal root ganglia

Following a peripheral nerve injury, a sterile inflammation develops in sympathetic and dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) with axons that project in the damaged nerve trunk. Macrophages and T-lymphocytes invade these ganglia where they are believed to release cytokines that lead to hyperexcitability and ectopic discharge, possibly contributing to neuropathic pain. Here, we examined the role of the sympathetic innervation in the inflammation of L5 DRGs of Wistar rats following transection of the sciatic nerve, comparing the effects of specific surgical interventions 10-14days prior to the nerve lesion with those of chronic administration of adrenoceptor antagonists. Immunohistochemistry was used to define the invading immune cell populations 7days after sciatic transection. Removal of sympathetic activity in the hind limb by transecting the preganglionic input to the relevant lumbar sympathetic ganglia (ipsi- or bilateral decentralization) or by ipsilateral removal of these ganglia with degeneration of postganglionic axons (denervation), caused less DRG inflammation than occurred after a sham sympathectomy. By contrast, denervation of the lymph node draining the lesion site potentiated T-cell influx. Systemic treatment with antagonists of α1-adrenoceptors (prazosin) or β-adrenoceptors (propranolol) led to opposite but unexpected effects on infiltration of DRGs after sciatic transection. Prazosin potentiated the influx of macrophages and CD4+ T-lymphocytes whereas propranolol tended to reduce immune cell invasion. These data are hard to reconcile with many in vitro studies in which catecholamines acting mainly via β2-adrenoceptors have inhibited the activation and proliferation of immune cells following an inflammatory challenge.
 2013 Dec 23.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24418114

Immune cell involvement in dorsal root ganglia and spinal cord after chronic constriction or transection of the rat sciatic nerve.

Chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve in rodents produces mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia and is a common model of neuropathic pain. Here we compare the inflammatory responses in L4/5 dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) and spinal segments after CCI with those after transection and ligation at the same site. Expression of ATF3 after one week implied that 75% of sensory and 100% of motor neurones had been axotomized after CCI. Macrophage invasion of DRGs and microglial and astrocytic activation in the spinal cord were qualitatively similar but quantitatively distinct between the lesions. The macrophage and glial reactions around neurone somata in DRGs and ventral horn were slightly greater after transection than CCI while, in the dorsal horn, microglial activation (using markers OX-42(for CD11b) and ED1(for CD68)) was greater after CCI. In DRGs, macrophages positive for OX-42(CD11b), CD4, MHC II and ED1(CD68) more frequently formed perineuronal rings beneath the glial sheath of ATF3+ medium to large neurone somata after CCI. There were more invading MHC II+ macrophages lacking OX-42(CD11b)/CD4/ED1(CD68) after transection. MHC I was expressed in DRGs and in spinal sciatic territories to a similar extent after both lesions. CD8+ T-lymphocytes aggregated to a greater extent both in DRGs and the dorsal horn after CCI, but in the ventral horn after transection. This occurred mainly by migration, additional T-cells being recruited only after CCI. Some of these were probably CD4+. It appears that inflammation of the peripheral nerve trunk after CCI triggers an adaptive immune response not seen after axotomy.
 2007 Jul;21(5):599-616. Epub 2006 Dec 21.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

BioEdge: Evidence-based medicine comes under attack

BioEdge: Evidence-based medicine comes under attack: "evidence-based medicine has its critics, as a bilious outbreak of comment and letters in the BMJ demonstrated recently. Early last month a Glasgow GP, Des Spence, said that the system of EBM had been corrupted. “If we don’t tackle the flaws of EBM there will be a disaster, but I fear it will take a disaster before anyone will listen,” he wrote.

How could anyone fault the notion of treatment based on scientifically validated evidence? No one. But the critics of EBM argue heatedly that the standards for the evidence are often low and tainted by commercial or personal interests."

http://www.bioedge.org/index.php/bioethics/bioethics_article/10841

Friday, February 7, 2014

The intervention is associated with severe immediate complications in some patients and persistent adverse effects for many


"The evidence for the effectiveness of ETS is weak. The intervention is associated with severe immediate complications in some patients and persistent adverse effects for many."

Effectiveness and safety of endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy: a systematic review (in Finnish). FinOHTA, Helsinki, STAKES; 2005. Report No.: 26. 

Thursday, February 6, 2014

prolongation of the isometric (tension) period (TP) of the left ventricle occurred in the majority (72 per cent) of all cases after sympathectomy

The prolongation of the isometric (tension) period (TP) of the left ventricle which occurred in the majority (72 per cent) of all cases after unilateral or bilateral transthoracic sympathectomy (without or with unilateral or bilateral transthoracic splanchnicotomy) indicates a diminution of inotropic cardiac action. It can be assumed to correspond to the cholinergic (vagal) preponderance which results from a partial or complete sympathetic denervation of the heart. Reduction of the pulse pressure oc-

curred in 56 per cent of the cases, probably due to the same mechanism.

www.chestjournal.org/content/38/4/423.full.pdfby W RAAB - 1960

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

change in sympathetic nervous system activity after thoracic sympathectomy

The photoplethysmographic (PPG) signal, which measures cardiac-induced changes in tissue blood volume by light transmission measurements, shows spontaneous fluctuations. In this study, PPG was simultaneously measured in the right and left index fingers of 16 patients undergoing thoracic sympathectomy, and, from each PPG pulse, the amplitude of the pulse (AM) and its maximum (BL) were determined. The parameter AM/BL is proportional to the cardiac-induced blood volume increase, which depends on the arterial wall compliance. AM/BL increased after the thoracic sympathectomy treatment (for male patients, from 2.60±1.49% to 4.81±1.21%), as sympathetic denervation decreases arterial tonus in skin. The very low-frequency (VLF) fluctuations of BL or AM showed high correlation (0.90±0.11 and 0.92±0.07, respectively) between the right and left hands before the thoracic sympathectomy, and a significant decrease in the right-left correlation coefficient (to 0.54±0.22 and 0.76±0.20, respectively) after the operation. The standard deviation of the BL or AM VLF fluctuations also reduced after the treatment, indicating sympathetic mediation of the VLF PPG fluctuations. The study also shows that the analysis of the PPG signal and the VLF fluctuations of the PPG parameters enable the assessment of the change in sympathetic nervous system activity after thoracic sympathectomy.
Volume 39Issue 5pp 579-583
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF02345149

Saturday, January 18, 2014

we observed a significant increase in net survival rate in non sympathectomised rates in comparison to sympathectomised

Results
                Graph 1 shows the survival rate in both sympathectomised and non sympathectomised rats after the administration of YA cells. The graph shows an overall shorter survival rate of sympathectomised rats. In both groups there is a steep decrease in survival after 15 days, causing the median survival rate (18 days) of both groups to overlap. On the other hand the net survival rate is increased in non sympathectomised rates by 6 days
References:
1.        Ewa Chelmicka – Szorc, Barry G. W. Arnason. Effect of 6-Hydroxydopamine on Tumor Growth. CANCER RESEARCH 1976, 36, 2382-2384.
2.        Boris Mravec, Neurobiológia chorôb periférnych tkanív, Bratislava, SAP 2008, 220 s.,  ISBN 978-80-8095-030-9
3.        Raju B, Haug SR, Ibrahim SO, Heyeraas KJ. Sympathectomy decreases size and invasiveness of tongue cancer in rats. Neuroscience. 2007;149(3):715-25.
4.        Mravec B ,Gidron Y,Hulin I. Neurobiology of cancer: Interactions between nervous, endocrine
and immune systems as a base for monitoring and modulating the tumorigenesis by the brain. Seminars in Cancer Biology 18 (2008) 150–163.
5.        Paul G. Green,Wilfrid Janig, Jon D. Levinel. Negative Feedback Neuroendocrine Control of Inflammatory Response in the Rat is Dependent on the Sympathetic Postganglionic Neuron. The Journal of Neuroscience, 1997, 17(8):3234 –3238
6.      Aparna A. Bhanushali , R. Raghunathan , Rajiv D. Kalraiya , Narendra G. Mehta. Cancer-related anemia in a rat model: α2-macroglobulin from Yoshida sarcoma shortens erythrocyte survival. European Journal of Haematology 2002. 68(1),42 - 48


The effect of sympathectomy on the growth of intraperitoneally administered Yoshida ascitic cells in rats
El-Hassoun Olia, Coauthors: Zuzana Valašková, Ivan Hulín
Supervisor: Boris Mravec
Institute of Pathophysiology, LF UK Bratislava
http://svoc.fmed.uniba.sk/abstrakty/48/36.html

Monday, December 16, 2013

Long-term sympathectomy induces sensory and parasympathetic fibres sprouting, and mast cell activation in the rat dura mater

Bergerot, AAubineau, P; (1998) Long-term sympathectomy induces sensory and parasympathetic fibres sprouting, and mast cell activation in the rat dura mater. EUR J NEUROSCI , 10 79 - 79. 

http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1330488/

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Lewis rats are much more likely to develop autoimmune disorders after sympathectomy

Lewis rats are much more likely to develop autoimmune disorders after sympathectomy 
(Dimitrova and Felten, 1995). This finding suggests that if sympathetic regulation were impaired in a 
genetically predisposed individual, an autoimmune disease might develop.  
Betrayal by the Brain: The Neurologic Basis of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia Syndrome and Related Neural Network Disorders  
by Jay A. Goldstein  

published by The Haworth Medical Press, 1996

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

significant change after sympathectomy: reduced sympathetic and increased vagal tone

The HRV analysis showed a significant change of indices reflecting sympatho-vagal balance indicating significantly reduced sympathetic (LF) and increased vagal (HF, rMSSD) tone. These changes still persisted after 2 years. Global HRV increased over time with significant elevation of SDANN after 2 years. QT dispersion was significantly reduced 1 month after surgery and the dispersion was further diminished 2 years later.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167527399001011

Thursday, December 5, 2013

"sympathectomy is a form of sensory neurectomy" (p. 1500)

Bonica's Management of Pain

Front Cover
Scott FishmanJane BallantyneJames P. Rathmell
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2010 - Medical - 1661 pages

Sunday, November 24, 2013

sympathectomized arteries become more susceptible to lipid accumulation

Combined effect of cholesterol feeding and sympathectomy on the lipid content in rabbit aortas
Volume 37, Issue 4, December 1980, Pages 521–528

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Decreased HRV is predictive of adverse cardiovascular outcomes in a variety of disease states

Water immersion-induced skin wrinkling (WISW) is dependent on intact peripheral sympathetic function. WISW was hypothesized to reflect autonomic function in subjects with- out peripheral neuropathy. We prospectively studied 70 healthy subjects (aged 31 88 years, 63% females) without cardiovascular risk factors or neurological disease. All sub- jects underwent short-term heart rate variability (HRV) stud- ies. Time and frequency domain variables were derived in- cluding the HRV index. WISW was graded using a previously validated scale of 1–4 of which 18.6% of subjects exhibited grade 1 (minimal) WISW and 35.7% had grade 2 WISW. On multivariate analysis using the HRV index, WISW was inde- pendently related to height and the HRV index. We conclude that WISW is related to central autonomic function.


Although the mechanism is not fully understood, WISW is felt to be caused by passive diffusion of water across the stratum corneum into the sweat ducts, which in turn alters electrolyte balance, decreases membrane stabilization, increases sympathetic neural firing and stimulates vasoconstriction [1–3, 8].WISW is decreased in diabetic patients and in patients after cervical sympathectomy [4, 9].
Heart rate variability (HRV) is the beat-to-beat variation in cardiac cycle length due to autonomic influence on the sinus node. Decreased HRV is predictive of adverse cardiovascular outcomes in a variety of disease states[5]. The influence of the central nervous system activity on autonomic function suggests that HRV may be a useful prognostic indicator in patients with cerebrovascular events [6].


Cardiology 2010;116:247–250 DOI: 10.1159/000316043
Received: May 10, 2010
Accepted after revision: May 28, 2010 Published online: August 18, 2010

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

In the Search for the Treatment of Compensatory Sweating

Removal of the clips from the sympathetic trunk does not provide resolution of compensatory sweating in 1 year of observation. T6-9 block does not provide remedy for compensatory hyperhidrosis. Regional abdomino-lumbar iontophoresis seems to be very promising, but further research and followup are mandatory.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3458267/

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Is sympathectomy (ETS) safe and effective?

Well, it depends on who you ask.
We already know what the surgeons who offer the surgery have to say about it, as most of us was conned into having the surgery. We also know what these surgeons have to say about non-surgical options (ineffective, tedious, time-consuming, expensive, not permanent, resulting in disabling side-effects, very painful, useless - on one website patients are told that application of BOTOX requires general anaesthesia, just to scare them off that one... : http://archive.is/lSWd0 ). The question is answered very differently when you ask a medical professional who offers these non-surgical treatment options. Their advice and their version of FACTS always depends on the treatment and technique they have on offer. 
A very simple exercise: print out the texts from few of these websites and offer it to someone to read. Then let them guess what they think which treatment the medical professional is siding with, that is: which treatment is being offered and advertised by them. 

Here is a sample. You will most certainly detect that this medical professional is NOT offering ETS, as he selected different FACTS about the procedure and it's results.

and because you can never be safe enough, here is the archived version:

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Natural bodily functioning does not include “purely autonomic” or “purely somatic” responses, just as it does not include ‘purely sympathetic” or “purely parasympathetic” responses

Langley initially expected to find afferent cell bodies in autonomic ganglia, with projections to other ganglia. He believed that activation of these “autonomic afferents” should lead to purely autonomic responses. However Langley’s own careful work demonstrated that there were no such neurons.

The fundamentally important point is that integrative processes responsible for the organization of visceral function occur principally within the central nervous system (brain and/or spinal cord). Both somatic and visceral afferents result in complex, brain mediated, responses that include somatic and visceral function. Autonomic motor activity can be generated by both somatic and visceral inputs to the CNS, and visceral inputs to the CNS initiate responses that are both somatic and autonomic. Natural bodily functioning does not include “purely autonomic” or “purely somatic” responses, just as it does not include ‘purely sympathetic” or “purely parasympathetic” responses.

Bill Blessing and Ian Gibbins (2008), Scholarpedia, 3(7):2787.
revision #46085 [link to/cite this article]

Curator: Dr. Bill Blessing, Centre for Neuroscience, Flinders University, Adelaide, AUSTRALIA

there are three main conditions which could impair the autonomy of a patient's medical decision: insufficient information, irrational beliefs/desires, and influence of different framing effects

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8519.2012.01973.x/abstract

Thursday, October 31, 2013

electric stimulation of the sympathetic cord in the upper thoracic level on the middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity



The effect of electric stimulation of the sympathetic cord in the upper thoracic level on the middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity (V(MCA)) in humans was examined using transcranial Doppler sonography monitoring during surgery for palmar hyperhidrosis. Sympathetic stimulation resulted in marked and rapid increases Of V(MCA). The responses were preceded by prompt increases of mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) and heart rate (HR). Division of the sympathetic cord cranially or caudally to the stimulation site partially reduced the V(MCA), MABP and HR responses. Both these operations reduced sympathetic pathways to the heart as reflected by a decrease in HR and MABP. The integrity of the sympathetic pathway from the stimulation site through the superior cervical ganglion and the carotid plexus was not a prerequisite for a V(MCA) response. Our data suggest that the V(MCA) increase mainly results from stimulation of the heart and the cardiovascular system, resulting in marked increases of blood pressure and heart rate.

CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES Volume: 2 Issue: 6 Pages: 359-364 Published: NOV-DEC 1992

Friday, October 18, 2013

Postsympathectomy pain of such severity that parenteral narcotics afforded no relief

Fifty-six consecutive patients who subsequently underwent ninety-six lumbar sympathectomies were studied prospectively with regard to the development of postoperative pain. Pain after operation was observed in thirty-four extremities by twenty-five of the patients (35 per cent). It began abruptly an average of twelve days after operation and was often accentuated nocturnally. The pain was almost always described as a deep, dull ache and persisted two to three weeks before spontaneously remitting. Postsympathectomy pain of such severity that parenteral narcotics afforded no relief developed in two of these fifty-six patients and in nine additional patients. Treatment with carbamazepine produced dramatic reduction in the intensity of pain in seven of these nine patients within twenty-four hours after the institution of therapy. Two patients were given intravenous diphenylhydantoin and both experienced immediate relief of pain. The mechanisms of the syndrome and of the action of these drugs are uncertain.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

A randomized placebo-controlled trial of oxybutynin for the initial treatment of palmar and axillary hyperhidrosis


Palmar and axillary hyperhidrosis improved in >70% of the patients, and 47.8% of those presented great improvement. Plantar hyperhidrosis improved in >90% of the patients. Most patients (65.2%) showed improvements in their quality of life. The side effects were minor, with dry mouth being the most frequent (47.8%).

Journal of Vascular SurgeryVolume 55, Issue 6June 2012Pages 1696-1700

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

40% affirmed they would ask for the operation if it were to be redone, 53% recurrence

At an average 12 years after surgery, 47% of patients were satisfied with the treatment results, 40% were disappointed. 
53% complaining about a decent to moderate recurrence of hand sweating and compensatory and gustatory sweating were observed in 9 (60%) and 5 (33%) patients, respectively. 
Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg(1): 54-57.

Only 56% would recommend thoracoscopic sympathectomy to others with hyperhydrosis

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21539945

Thursday, October 3, 2013

post-sympathectomy hyperalgesia


Behavioral test of tolerance for aversive mechanical stimuli in sympathectomized cats.


 , 
W J Roberts
  and 
D L Rhodes
Cats were studied behaviorally to determine their suitability as an animal model for the post-sympathectomy hyperalgesia reported to occur in humans. For this study a device and methodology were developed which allow humane testing of tolerance for intense mechanical stimulation of the hindlegs. Behavioral tolerance was measured quantitatively before and after unilateral sympathectomy. The results from this preliminary study of 6 cats are remarkably similar to those reported for humans; 1 of the 6 cats showed a decreased tolerance on the sympathectomized side which was delayed in onset and of limited duration. The new methodology appears to provide relatively stable, quantitative measures of tolerance for aversive stimulation, and the cat shows promise as an animal model for post-sympathectomy hyperalgesia.
Pain. 1983; 15(2)

Monday, September 23, 2013

significant number of primary hyperhidrosis patients (more than 70%) were so pleased with the results that they decided to forgo the surgery


At the beginning of our study, thoracic sympathectomy was indicated indiscriminately to all primary hyperhidrosis patients. The authors observed a number of patients who were dissatisfied with the results obtained from this technique, particularly due to the undesirable but frequent side effect of compensatory hyperhidrosis. Hyperhidrosis is a condition that deeply affects the individual's emotional component, and many of them, despite being warned previously, are not psychologically prepared to address this new situation. The authors then included a psychologist in the study and directed the patients for routine psychological evaluations to prepare and better select them for surgery. In addition, the authors began to study a pharmacological formula to medicate these patients for the same purpose. Oxybutynin is an anticholinergic drug that has been used safely at high doses (up to 15 mg/day) to treat micturition disorders, and a side effect observed in these patients has been diminished sudoresis. Studies conducted by our group have documented the clinical benefits of a low dose of oxybutynin (10 mg/day). The authors found that a significant number of primary hyperhidrosis patients (more than 70%) were so pleased with the results that they decided to forgo the surgery [50-53].
Expert Review of Dermatology7.6 (Dec 2012): 529-538.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Neuralgia due to sympathectomy


Depending on the skill of the surgeon and difficulty encountered performing various intraoperative maneuvers, the incidence of complications following sympathectomy should be the same as that following any other extraperitoneal or extrapleural operation. However, a frequent complication following sympathectomy, and one which is apparently unrelated to operative technique, is that of postsympathectomy neuralgia.
This neuralgia is characterized by aching thigh pain after lumbar sympathectomy or aching shoulder and arm pain after cervical sympathectomy. The pain is intense in severity, sudden in onset and disappearance, and not related to any major neurologic manifestations.
Recently we have reviewed the files of the Vascular Surgical Service at the West Roxbury Veteran's Hospital and the literature on this condition. This report is a presentation of our findings.
Incidence  Pain following sympathectomy has been described as "an all too common complaint."8 Reports have varied in incidence from 2.1% to "practically every case."
http://archsurg.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=560162

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Autonomic neuropathy in the skin following sympathectomy


In diabetics with the anhidrotic syndrome, autonomic nerve fibres were studied in skin biopsies using argentic techniques and light microscopy. The Minor test was used to differentiate normal from anhidrotic skin areas. In the anhidrotic areas, histology of the nerve fibres showed beading, spindle-shaped thickening and fragmentation adjacent to the sweat glands. These changes were similar to those observed in two patients who had previously undergone lumbar sympathectomy. No abnormalities of the sympathetic nerve endings could be found in biopsies taken from normal areas of the forearm of the same patients. We conclude that the diabetic anhidrotic syndrome, a form of diabetic autonomic neuropathy, is due to a lesion of the sympathetic nerve supply to the skin.
I. Faerman1, E. Faccio3, I. Calb2, J. Razumny1, N. Franco2, A. Dominguez2 and H. A. Podestá1

Monday, August 26, 2013

after sympathectomy the hands may become hyperkeratotic, with fissuring and scaling


Sympathectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis is effective, but has risks associated with surgery and a permanent non-sweating hand, which may become hyperkeratotic, with fissuring and scaling.

The autonomic nervous system: an introduction to basic and clinical concepts

By Otto Appenzeller, Emilio Oribe

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Cilio-spinal center can extend to T5


The ciliospinal reflex (pupillary-skin reflex) consists of dilation of the ipsilateral pupil in response to pain applied to the neck, face, and upper trunk. If the right side of the neck is subjected to a painful stimulus, the right pupil dilates (increases in size 1-2mm from baseline). This reflex is absent in Horner's syndrome and lesions involving the cervical sympathetic fibers. The enhanced ciliospinal reflex in asymptomatic patients with cluster headache is due to preganglionic sympathetic mechanisms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciliospinal_reflex


The cilio-spinal center is not sharply confined to TI spinal level, but may extend downwards as low as T5

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

financial interests may unduly influence professionals’ judgments

widespread relationships with industry have created significant risks that… financial interests may unduly influence professionals’ judgments.

“conflicts of interest” threaten the integrity of research, the objectivity of education, the quality of patient care, and public trust in medicine.


Conflict of Interest in Medical Research, Education, and Practice

Released:
April 21, 2009
Type:
Consensus Report
Topics:
Biomedical and Health ResearchEducation
Activity:
Conflict of Interest in Medical Research, Education, and Practice
Board:
Board on Health Sciences Policy

Friday, August 9, 2013

Endoscopic sympathectomy is not minimally invasive


The term ‘‘minimally invasive surgery’’ was initially applied to coelioscopic procedures such as laparoscopic cholecystectomy and hernia repair, thoracoscopic sympathectomy, and arthroscopy, but has since been abandoned, because doing the same operation through a smaller incision is not necessarily less invasive. The term ‘‘minimally invasive parathyroidectomy’’ does not fully convey the nature of the techniques, and, as previously debated in the wider field of minimal-access surgery, carries connotations of increased safety that are not necessarily supported by the existing data [12].
Surg Clin N Am 84 (2004) 717–734
F. Fausto Palazzo, MS, FRCS(Gen),
Leigh W. Delbridge, MD, FACS*

Department of Surgery, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney 2065, NSW, Australia

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

This is how "Australia’s leading source for trustworthy medical information" describes sympathectomy


"Sympathectomy is a procedure that is used to treat neuropathic pain. It interrupts the sympathetic nervous system either temporarily or permanently."
http://www.virtualmedicalcentre.com/medical-dictionary/alpha/s

Virtual Medical Centre
Australia’s leading source for trustworthy medical information written by health professionals.
Please be aware that we do not give advice on your individual medical condition,
if you want advice please see your treating physician.
Virtual Medical Centre © 2002 - 2013 | Privacy Policy Last updated 8 Aug 2013

Friday, August 2, 2013

progressive hemifacial atrophy following sympathectomy for hyperhidrosis


Some authors consider the disease a variant of mor- phea because the histologic changes are identical to deep scleroderma.The possible etiologies include sympathetic denervation, trauma, vascular malformations, immunologic abnormality, heredi- tary disease, or infection by a slow virus.To our knowledge, this is the first report of a young patient with a possible association between Parry-Romberg syndrome and thoracoscopic sympathectomy.

Theoretically, thoracoscopic sympathectomy may cause 2 of the aforementioned etiologies of Parry- Romberg syndrome: sympathetic denervation and trauma. Thoracoscopic sympathectomy is a surgical technique for the treatment of palmar hyperhidrosis.

The operation ablates the upper thoracic sympa- thetic nerve ganglions responsible for nerve stimu- lation of the sweat glands of the upper limbs. The most significant complication is Horner’s syn- drome, which results from injury to the stellate sympathetic ganglion.In a summary of sympa- thectomies in 67 children and adolescents, compli- cations included Horner’s syndrome in 1 patient (1%) and varying degrees of compensatory sweat- ing in 30 patients (45%).Despite the evidence from animal studies that sympathectomy can result in facial atrophy, to our knowledge, there were no previous reports of such an association in humans.
Cutis. 2004;73:343-344, 346.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

RSD due to nerve injury


According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), RSD is "a chronic pain condition that is believed to be the result of dysfunction in the central or peripheral nervous systems." According to MedicineNet, RSD involves "irritation and abnormal excitation of nervous tissue, leading to abnormal impulses along nerves that affect blood vessels and skin."
Animal studies indicate that norepinephrine, a catecholamine released from sympathetic nerves, acquires the capacity to activate pain pathways after tissue or nerve injury, resulting in RSD. Another theory suggests that RSD, which follows an injury, is caused by triggering an immune response and symptoms associated with inflammation (redness, warmth, swelling). RSD is not thought to have a single cause, but rather multiple causes producing similar symptoms.
http://arthritis.about.com/od/rsd/a/rsd.htm

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Sympathetic chain ganglia are responsible for delivering information to the rest of the body regarding stress situations and the fight or flight response

Sympathetic chain ganglia are responsible for delivering information to the rest of the body regarding stress situations and the fight or flight response. These sympathetic ganglia are the structures that are destroyed during a sympathectomy
http://www.ast.org/publications/Journal%20Archive/2009/9_September_2009/CE.pdf

After sympathectomy in rats there is an increase in osteoclast-mediated bone resorption as well as an increase in the number of osteoclasts on the sympathectomized side

Paper: Osteoclastic Activation In Periapical Lesions After NPY Knockout (IADR/AADR/CADR 87th General Session and Exhibition (April 1-4, 2009)): "After sympathectomy in rats there is an increase in osteoclast-mediated bone resorption as well as an increase in the number of osteoclasts on the sympathectomized side compared to the control. These findings suggest an inhibitory effect of the SNS on bone resorption via osteoclasts. Our objective was to determine if an SNS mediator, neuropeptide Y (NPY), affects osteoclastic activity after pulpal exposure."

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Two-stage unilateral versus one-stage bilateral single-port sympathectomy for palmar and axillary hyperhidrosis

Compensatory sweating occurred in 25 (19%) patients of the one-stage group and in 6 (4%) of the two-stage group (P = 0.0001). No patients developed Horner’s syndrome.
CONCLUSIONS: Both two-stage unilateral and one-stage bilateral single-port video-assisted thoracoscopic sympathectomies are effective, safe and minimally invasive procedures. Two-stage unilateral sympathectomy can be performed with a lower occurrence of compensatory sweating, improving permanently the quality of life in patients with palmar and axillary hyperhidrosis. 
http://icvts.oxfordjournals.org/content/16/6/834.full.pdf+html 

sympathectomy led to significant decrements in escape and avoidance responding

PsycNET - Option to Buy: "Chemical sympathectomy and avoidance learning in the rat.
By Di Giusto, E. L.; King, M. G.
Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, Vol 81(3), Dec 1972, 491-500.
Abstract
Reports results of 5 experiments with male Wistar rats (N = 108). Depletion of peripheral sympathetic noradrenaline induced by administration of 6-hydroxydopamine, ip, led to significant decrements in escape and avoidance responding when the required response was difficult, but not when it was relatively easy to acquire. Results are similar to previous findings obtained with adrenal-demedullated Ss. Findings clarify the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the motivation of behavior elicited by aversive stimulation. Implications for 2-process theory and the "Kamin effect," or "learned helplessness," are discussed. (40 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)"

Hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating). DermNet NZ

Hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating). DermNet NZ: "Localised hyperhidrosis may also be due to:

Stroke
Spinal damage
Peripheral damage
Surgical sympathectomy
Neuropathy
Brain tumour
Chronic anxiety disorder"


Thursday, July 18, 2013

Severity of compensatory sweating after thor... [Ann Thorac Surg. 2004] - PubMed - NCBI

Severity of compensatory sweating after thor... [Ann Thorac Surg. 2004] - PubMed - NCBI: "Compensatory sweating occurred in 89% of patients and was so severe in 35% that they often had to change their clothes during the day. The frequency of compensatory sweating was not significantly different among the three groups, but severity was significantly higher after Th2-4 sympathectomy for axillary hyperhidrosis (p = 0.04). Gustatory sweating occurred in 38% of patients, and 16% of patients regretted the operation.
CONCLUSIONS:
Compensatory and gustatory sweating were remarkably frequent side effects after thoracoscopic sympathectomy for primary hyperhidrosis."


Thursday, July 11, 2013

Impaired skin vasomotor reflexes have been found in patients with sympathetic dystrophies, dysautomias, post-regional sympathectomy and diabetic neuropathies

Not surprisingly, diminished vasoconstrictor responses, similar to the current findings, have been found
in patients with sympathetic dystrophies [26], dysautomias [27], post-regional sympathectomy [28] and
diabetic neuropathies [11].


Additionally, there have been a few reports of EM patients benefitting from sympathectomy or neurolitic
irreversible blocks of the lumbar sympathetic ganglia [22,23], while others have found the symptoms of EM to be aggravated by such treatment [24,25], possibly as a result of denervation supersensitivity.
Clinical Science (1999) 96, 507ñ512 (Printed in Great Britain)
Roberta C. LITTLEFORD, Faisel KHAN and Jill J. F. BELCH
University Department of Medicine, Section of Vascular Medicine and Biology, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School,
Dundee DD1 9SY, Scotland, U.K.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Sympathectomy interrupts neural messages that ordinarily would travel to many different organs, glands and muscles

Sympathectomy involves dissection of the main sympathetic trunk in the upper thoracic region thus interrupting neural messages that ordinarily would travel to many different organs, glands and muscles. It involves division of adrenergic, cholinergic and sensory fibers which elaborate adrenergic substances during the process of regulating visceral function.
Journal of Applied Sciences Research, 6(6): 659-664, 2010

Vascular sympathetic denervation can lead to degeneration of the smooth muscle of arteries leading to medial arterial calcification and stiffening of the arteries

Sympathetic denervation of the peripheral arterial system may occur quite early in the evolution of neuropathy and has major effects on blood flow and vascular responses and causes structural changes in the arterial wall (Edmonds 2004). Vascular sympathetic denervation can lead to degeneration of the smooth muscle of arteries leading to medial arterial calcification and stiffening of the arteries. This calcification may assume the histological characteristics of bone.
   Unilateral lumbar sympathectomy in humans, both in diabetics and non-diabetics, has been show to result in medial wall calcification on the ipsilateral side (Goebel and Fuessl 1983). Unilateral sympathectomy in animals leads to excess deposition of cholesterol on the operated side and the occurrence of cholesterol sclerosis in the rabbit's aorta was accelerated by removal of the coeliac ganglion (Harrison 1938). Furthermore, in animal models, denervation of smooth muscle leads to striking pathological changes, including atrophy of muscle fibres with foci of degeneration (Kerper and Collier 1926). Arterial calcification in initiated within senescent atrophic smooth muscle (Morgan 1980).
   Medial arterial calcification in the Pima Indians is significantly associated with an increased prevalence of cardiovascular mortality (Everhart et al 1988). Medial calcification may be important factor in development of peripheral vascular disease, which in diabetes shows a predilection for the distal arteries below the knee and is unexplained. Chantelau reported an association of below knee atherosclerosis to medial arterial calcification (Chantelau et al. 1995).
p. 653

Autonomic Failure: A Textbook of Clinical Disorders of the Autonomic Nervous System[Hardcover]

Christopher J. Mathias Roger Bannister 
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 5 edition (July 24, 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198566344
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198566342