Relationship between sympathovagal tone and personality traits
Received 27 August 1997.
Results of two-factor ANOVAs revealed substantial differences in personality characteristics depending on the level of sympathetic and parasympathetic tone respectively.
Correlational analysis showed remarkable relationships between sympathetic tone and some prominent personality traits. By introducing one of these personality traits (anxiety) as a covariate into two-factor ANCOVAs the originally obtained results were markedly altered.
PERSONALITY, AFFECT, AND CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSE
Headache Following Cervical Sympathectomy - Harvard Medical School
Cervical sympathectomy reduces the heterogeneity of oxygen saturation in small cerebrocortical veins
Department of Anesthesia, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway 08854-5635.
This study evaluated the hypothesis that the peripheral sympathetic nervous system is one of the factors increasing the heterogeneity of venous O2 saturation in selective brain regions. Regional cerebral blood flow and O2 saturation were determined in the anterior cortex, posterior cortex, and medulla of either sham-operated or bilaterally sympathectomized Long-Evans rats. Cerebral venous O2 saturations, indicating the balance between local O2 supply and consumption, were found to be significantly more heterogeneous in the sham-operated group. In the anterior cortex, the coefficient of variation [100(SD/mean)] for the sham-operated animals was 22.4%. Sympathectomy significantly reduced this heterogeneity in the anterior cortex through a reduction in the number of low O2 saturation veins (coefficient of variation 11.7%). Blood flow and O2 consumption in the anterior cortex were not different between groups. The effects of sympathectomy in the posterior cortex were similar to those in the anterior cortex. However, sympathectomy did not alter any measured variables in the medulla. Thus, bilateral superior cervical ganglionectomy reduced the heterogeneity of cerebrocortical venous O2 saturation by reducing the number of low O2 saturation veins in the rostral part of the brain.Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 74, Issue 4 1911-1915, Copyright © 1993 by American Physiological Society
http://jap.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/74/4/1911
Sympathectomy - basal ganglia - functions
The Unbalanced Autonomic Nervous System Causes the Symptoms of the Metabolic Syndrome
The metabolic syndrome consists of visceral obesity, hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, dyslipidemia, and cardiovascular diseases. A common pathophysiological denominator underlying these epidemiological correlations has not been identified. However, the autonomic nervous system was shown to play a role in the metabolic syndrome. Recently, a prospective cohort study in 8,000 patients from 1987-1998 revealed a high relative risk to develop type 2 diabetes if autonomic dysfunction is present in healthy subjects independent from other risk factors, such as body weight.[42]
Diabetes. 2003;52(11):2652-2656. ©2003 American Diabetes Association, Inc.
sympathectomy can relieve symptoms of angina
Clinical Investigations
American Heart Journal. 133(6):648-655, June 1997.Gramling-Babb, Patricia MD; Miller, Michael J. MD; Reeves, Scott T. MD; Roy, Raymond C. MD; Zile, Michael R. MD
http://pt.wkhealth.com/pt/re/amhj/abstract.00000406-199706000-00007.htm;jsessionid=L6WWlJ0hBkQfdvQ9pgYwy1mHSyrL4pcGKTw5PvNGJSgDFD1j8L3V!1270838445!181195628!8091!-1
disturbed peripheral vascular and heart rate responses
Is Previous Thoracic Sympathectomy a Risk Factor for Exertional Heat Stroke?
Abnormal stress responses in patients with diseases affecting the sympathetic nervous system
Patients who lack baroreceptors have exaggerated blood pressure responses to stress. They have episodes of hypertension and hypotension that cause headaches and dizziness.Patients with diseases of the sympathetic nervous system illustrate that everyday occurrences such as a change in posture or ambient temperature are stresses requiring a marked change in sympathetic nervous activity. Both physical and psychological stresses elicit large initial sympathetic neuronal responses that are subsequently damped by feedback inhibition from structures such as the baroreceptors. Damage to part of these feedback loops leads to exaggerated pressor responses to stress.
Ziegler MG, Ruiz-Ramon P, Shapiro MH.
University of California, San Diego.
Psychosom Med. 1993 Jul-Aug;55(4):339-46.