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

treatment of choice??!!

As with other tissues and organs, hypoxia, such as at high altitude, causes an increase in blood flow to bone, as does hypercapnia and sympathectomy.

http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:iRmCgVbEWmAJ:worldortho.com/index.php%3FItemid%3D264%26id%3D491%26option%3Dcom_content%26task%3Dview+somnolence+sympathectomy&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=106&gl=au&client=firefox-a


The antihypertensive effects of the drug may be enhanced in the post-sympathectomy patient.

Diovan HCT Tablets


Drug and SYMPATHECTOMY interaction


Tell your doctor if you have any of
the following medical conditions:
* kidney problems
* liver problems
* heart problems
* diabetes
* recent excessive vomiting or
diarrhoea
* Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
(SLE), a disease affecting the
skin, joints and kidneys
* a salt restricted diet
* a past operation known as
sympathectomy
If you have not told your doctor
about any of the above, tell
him/her before you start taking
Atacand Plus 16/12.5.

What Atacand Plus
16/12.5 is for
Atacand Plus 16/12.5 is used to treat
high blood pressure.



Causes of SYNCOPE

neurological, mechanical or both:
sympathectomy


http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/symptoms/coma/book-causes-6a.htm

HOW SYMPATHECTOMY CAUSES PAIN

During surgery, for example, accidental sympathectomy can occur, leading to neuroma development and a predictable sequence of events: “internal” stimulation of afferent or somatosensory neurons, generation of efferent nerve impulses, and the subsequent sensation of neurologic pain.
JAMES F. CARTER, MD, and DAVID E. SOPER, MD


effects of thiazides may be enhanced in the post-sympathectomy patient

Somnolence, 0.7, 1.1, 0.7, 0.9. Loss of libido, 1.2, 0.4, 1.2, 0.4 .... effects of thiazides may be enhanced in the post-sympathectomy patient. ...
www.rxlist.com/cgi/generic/bishctz_ad.htm - 62k



epidural catheter - three years after a sympathectomy

epidural abscess in a patient with dorsal hyperhidrosis .

PURPOSE: To report the management of a patient who developed a lumbar epidural abscess when an epidural catheter was placed three years after a thoracic sympathectomy. The possible contribution of hyperhidrosis is discussed. CLINICAL FEATURES: A 62-yr-old male had compensatory hyperhidrosis in his back after thoracic sympathectomy. The patient, who suffered from thromboangeitis obliterans, underwent lumbar (L2-3) epidural catheterization in order to improve arterial circulation and ameliorate resting pain in his left leg. On the third day after catheterization, the patient complained of a dull pain in his back. Emergency magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 12-mm abscess in the epidural space. On the tenth day after catheterization, laminotomy at the 3-4 lumbar vertebrae and local drainage were performed. A 14-mm abscess was removed from the epidural space. The patient was discharged on day 21 after catheterization without any disability. CONCLUSION: Special precautions against infection may be necessary in patients with hyperhidrosis in the area where continuous epidural catheterization is attempted



Compensatory Sweating is NOT 'compensatory' It is abnormal and uncontrollable sweating.

Compensatory Sweating


Compensatory sweating is excessive sweating that may occur on the back, chest, abdomen, legs, face, and buttocks as a side effect of ETS surgery. This side effect is grave because it can be equally or even more extreme than the original sweating problem.

In a study involving 121 patients at the Medical City Hospital of Dallas, Texas, compensatory sweating occurred in more than 80% of the patients undergoing ETS. Similarly, in a Danish study conducted at the Aarhus University Hospital, 90% of the patients undergoing ETS for underarm sweating, reported compensatory sweating, half of whom were forced to change their clothes during the day because of it. http://www.sweathelp.org/English/PFF_Treatment_Surgery.asp

Serious negative side effects of sympathectomy

After all other treatments have been tried, adjusted for individual circumstances, and still found to be ineffective, surgical treatment for excessive sweating may be an option considered by your physician. There are a number of different types of surgery that are sometimes used to treat hyperhidrosis. These include local surgical procedures that remove the sweat glands and endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy (ETS). ETS, in particular, is considered a last resort because it frequently causes serious, irreversible compensatory sweating. And in fact, most physicians do not recommend ETS surgery because of the serious negative side effects of the procedure."
http://www.sweathelp.org/English/PFF_Treatment_Surgery.asp

Severe side-effects, permanent damage

"Due to side effects, oral medications are not recommended as a long-term solution. Similarly, surgical options, although heavily advertised, are reserved for only certain severe cases of hyperhidrosis that have not responded to any of the other treatment options. Before considering surgical treatment, physicians and their patients must fully consider and discuss the very real risks of permanent damage and severe side effects."http://www.sweathelp.org/English/PFF_Treatment_Overview.asp

Last resort surgery? What does that mean??

"Dr. Goodman: Mainly dermatologists and cosmetic physicians provide treatments for excessive sweating here. Treatments available include heavy-duty antiperspirants, botulinum toxin injections, and iontophoresis. We provide iontophoresis treatments here at the Skin and Cancer Foundation of Victoria and it's available at certain other hospital centers, but it's not available in private practice like it is in the United States, and usually the iontophoresis units being used have been built by hospitals' own engineering departments. Occasionally, though, the R.A. Fischer galvanic units may also be used. Endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy is still practiced here but its use is decreasing and it's really only advocated as the last resort for palmar [hand] hyperhidrosis or facial blushing, and it's only rarely used for axillary [underarm] hyperhidrosis. "

http://www.sweathelp.org/English/CMN_Article.asp?ArticleCode=64750038


SYMPATHECTOMY BANNED

SYMPATHECTOMY HAS BEEN BANNED IN SWEDEN IN 2003.


SYMPATHECTOMY REDUCES FEAR


"Experiements in animals demonstrate that sympathectomy may retard averse conditioning. (DiGusto and King, 1972), most likely because sympathectomy reduces fear."
Clinical Neuropsychology 2003


sympathectomy abolishes the circadian rhythm

Melatonin Metabolism: Neural Regulation of Pineal Serotonin ...

These data indicate that superior cervical sympathectomy abolishes the ... Indole metabolism in the pineal gland: a circadian rhythm in N-acetyltransferase. ...
www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=389600





PROFOUND CHANGES IN CATECHOLAMINE CONTENT FOLLOWING SYMPATHECTOMY

These results indicate that alterations in the relative abundance of TH mRNA mediate changes in TH activity induced by chronic stress or sympathectomy, and that these changes require an intact sympathetic input.

Molecular adaptations in catecholamine biosynthesis induced by cold stress and sympathectomy
M.K. Stachowiak 1, S.J. Fluharty 2, E.M. Stricker 2, M.J. Zigmond 3, B.B. Kaplan, Ph.D. 1 *



SYMPATHECTOMY INDUCES ADRENERGIC EXCITABILITY





SYMPATHECTOMY=BETABLOCKER

Cardiovascular changes after bilateral upper dorsal sympathectomy. Short- and
long-term effects.

Papa MZ, Bass A, Schneiderman J, Drori Y, Tucker E, Adar R.
The effect of bilateral upper dorsal sympathectomy (UDS) on cardiac function was investigated in two groups of young healthy
patients who underwent bilateral excision of T2 and T3 ganglia for palmar hyperhidrosis. In ten patients echocardiography of
left ventricular function (LVF) was performed before operation and 2 weeks after operation. Electrocardiograms (ECG) were done before operation, during operation immediately after sectioning each sympathetic chain, and at 2 weeks after operation.
The mean pulse rate decreased significantly in patients after they underwent bilateral UDS. There were no clinical arrhythmias or changes in LVF in any patient. Submaximal exercise testing and ECG tracings done at rest and after effort were obtained for 29 patients before undergoing bilateral UDS, 30 days after operation, and 1-3 more times within a 2-year postoperative period.
Pulse rates taken at rest and after effort were significantly lower than those taken after operation, and the blood pressure response to exercise was blunted. ECG tracings showed a significant change in the electrical frontal plane axis and shortening of the QTc interval. These changes were evident 30 days after operation and persisted for 2 years.