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

After severing the cervical sympathetic trunk, the cells of the cervical sympathetic ganglion undergo transneuronic degeneration
After severing the sympathetic trunk, the cells of its origin undergo complete disintegration within a year.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1439-0442.1967.tb00255.x/abstract

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Orthostatic hypotension following sympathectomy can lead to syncope

  1. Describe the reflex compensations when someone suddenly stands up from a supine position. What would happen in a patient who just had a sympathectomy?

    Sudden standing causes pooling of blood in the leg veins. This results in decreased venous return to the heart, which leads to decreased cardiac output (Frank-Starling mechanism), which leads to decreased MAP. This decrease in MAP is detected by the carotid sinus baroreceptors, which relay a message to the medullary cardiovascular control center, which increases sympathetic outflow and decreases parasympathetic outflow, this causes:

  • An increase in HR and myocardial contractility, tending to restore cardiac output.
  • Vasoconstriction in skeletal musculature, skin, kidneys and gut, reducing blood flow to these organs and increasing TPR.
  • Venoconstriction decreasing capacitance and increasing venous return

    A patient with a sympathectomy would experience what's referred to as orthostatic hypotension (which might lead to syncope). Orthostatic hypotension is a decrease in arterial pressure when going from supine to a standing position. A person with a normal baroreceptor mechanism will try to restore MAP. In a person who had a sympathectomy, the sympathetic component of the baroreceptor mechanism is absent.

  1. Will the capillary pressure increase or decrease in the following situations?
  1. Arteriolar vasodilation: increase
  1. Venodilation: decrease (however, Dr. Gray points out that capillary beds of lower extremities will experience an increase in pressure due to back pressure exerted by the column of blood in the dilated veins!)

M.A.S.T.E.R. Learning Program, UC Davis School of Medicine

Date Revised: Jan 16, 2002

Revised by: Gordon Li and Carolyn Nguyen

Marked MAP instability following sympathectomy

In this study, conscious freely behaving rats with functional sympathetic denervation of the vessels, as evidenced by the disappearance of pressor responses to tyramine, did not show any change in the mean level of blood pressure but had a striking increase in the spontaneous MAP (mean arterial pressure) variability as compared with intact rats. This exaggerated blood pressure lability was associated with an increase in the variability of mesentric conductance with no change in that of the hindquarters vascular bed, which is the sum of vascular conductances of all regional hemodynamic changes after sympathectomy and suggest that the sympathetic nervous system may play an important role in reducing short-term hemodynamic variability.
In conclusion, the results of the present study suggest a major role for the sympathetic nervous system in the regulation of regional circulations, the loss of which in sympathectomized rats results in a marked instability of MAP. The vasodilator component of MAP lability after sympathectomy does not appear to depend on an episodic release of NO synthesized by the L-arginine pathway.

Genetic Hypertension, by Jean Sassard

Under the patronage of: Ministère de la recherche et de la technologie, Ministère délégué à la santé, INSERM, CNRS (Départment des sciences de la vie), Conseil général du Rhône, Mairie de Lyon, Chambre de commerce et d'industrie de Lyon
Genetic Hypertension: Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on SHR and Related Studies Held in Lyon (France), Ecole Normale Supérieure, October 28-30, 1991 = Hypertension Génétique

Sympathectomy for the treatment of Tachycardia

Bilateral thoracoscopic cervical sympathectomy for the treatment of recurrent polymorphic ventricular tachycardia

A J Turley, J Thambyrajah, A A Harcombe

Cardiothoracic Division, The James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK

She was ultimately treated successfully with bilateral thoracoscopic cervicothoracic sympathectomies. This is the first reported bilateral thoracoscopic treatment of a patient with LQTS and symptomatic life threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmias refractory to current pharmacological and pacing techniques.

Heart 2005;91:15-17
© 2005 by BMJ Publishing Group & British Cardiac Society

Fertility following sympathectomy

Both chemically and surgically induced sympathectomy increased the weight of the epididymis and seminal vesicles/coagulating glands as well as the number and the transit time of cauda epididymal sperm. Neither serum testosterone levels nor LH was affected by treatment with guanethidine. Using natural mating, no litters were produced by guanethidine-treated rats. Chemically denervated rats failed to produce copulatory plugs or ejaculate into the uterus. However, distal cauda epididymal sperm from chemically or surgically denervated rats displayed normal fertilization ability (80%) using in utero inseminations.
Biology of Reproduction 59, 897-904 (1998)
©Copyright 1998 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

Fertility of Rat Epididymal Sperm after Chemically and Surgically Induced Sympathectomy1

Wilma De G. Kempinas2,a, Juan D. Suarezb, Naomi L. Robertsb, Lillian F. Straderb, Janet Ferrellb, Jerome M. Goldmanb, Michael G. Narotskyb, Sally D. Perreaultb, Donald P. Evensonc, Deborah D. Rickerd, , and Gary R. Klinefelterb

Norepinephrine loss produces motor deficits

Norepinephrine loss produces more profound motor deficits than MPTP treatment in mice

1. K. S. Rommelfanger*,
2. G. L. Edwards†,
3. K. G. Freeman†,
4. L. C. Liles*,
5. G. W. Miller‡, and
6. D. Weinshenker*,§


Departments of *Human Genetics and
‡Environmental and Occupational Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322; and
†Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602
Edited by Richard D. Palmiter, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, and approved June 25, 2007 (received for review March 27, 2007)

Effect of adrenalectomy or sympathectomy on spinal cord blood flow

We conclude that adrenalectomy near-totally ablates the hypothermia-associated increase in RSCBF (regional spinal cord blood flow) measured in intact rats and that abdominal sympathectomy totally ablates it. This evidence complements morphological evidence for adrenergic innervation of the spinal cord vasculature.

Heart and Circulatory Physiology, Vol 260, Issue 3 827-H831, Copyright © 1991 by American Physiological Society

A. Iwai, W. W. Monafo and S. G. Eliasson
Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.

http://ajpheart.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/260/3/H827

Morphofunctional changes in the myocardium following sympathectomy

Vestn Akad Med Nauk SSSR. 1984;(2):80-5.
Related Articles, Links

[Morphofunctional changes in the myocardium following sympathectomy and their role in the development of sudden death from ventricular fibrillation]

[Article in Russian]

Beskrovnova NN, Makarychev VA, Kiseleva ZM, Legon'kaia , Zhuchkova NI.

Publication Types:

* English Abstract

Postoperative complications are frequent after sympathectomy

[Postoperative complications are frequent after surgery for palmar sweating and facial redness. Effects of the treatment must be considered with regard to the risk of side-effects]
[My paper] L Räf

Lakartidningen. 2001 Apr 11;98 (15):1764-5 11374001 (P,S,E,B)

inhalation of carbon dioxide

Minerva Med. 1958 Feb 14;49(13):514-6.Links
[Behavior of liquoral pressure after inhalation of carbon dioxide, as evaluative test of cerebral circulation with particular regard to treatment by sympathetic block in focal vascular cerebropathies.]
[Article in Italian]

POLETTI T, CAMERON-CURRY V, SGARBI M.

PMID: 13516803 [PubMed - OLDMEDLINE]

Cerebral accidents of vascular origin and cervical sympathectomy

Progr Med (Paris). 1955 Feb 10;83(3):43-7.Links
[Cerebral accidents of vascular origin and cervical sympathectomy.]
[Article in French]

CHAVANY JA, DJINDJIAN R, HAGEN-MULLER D.

Role of sympathectomy in the treatment of cerebrovascular occlusion

J Albert Einstein Med Cent (Phila). 1960 Jan;8:31-8.Links
Role of sympathectomy in the treatment of cerebrovascular occlusion.
SHENKIN HA, FINNESON BE.

Resection of the cervical sympathetic nerve in cerebrovascular diseases

Progr Med (Napoli). 1957 May 31;13(10):289-94.Links
[Resection of the cervical sympathetic nerve in cerebrovascular diseases.]
[Article in Italian]

POLETTI T, SGARBI M, CAMERON-CURRY

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13453570?ordinalpos=1&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_DiscoveryPanel.Pubmed_Discovery_RA&linkpos=5&log$=relatedarticles&logdbfrom=pubmed