"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

http://www.pfizer.no/templates/Page____886.aspx

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'

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

sympathectomy, by chemical or surgical means, is based on such anecdotal observation and small case studies which have failed to stand up to scientific scrutiny

Clinical trials do exist and their inability to demonstrate effectiveness suggests an obvious conclusion: the argument for sympathectomy, by chemical or surgical means, is based on such anecdotal observation and small case studies which have failed to stand up to scientific scrutiny. To date there are no reproducible, blinded, randomized studies utilizing control populations which have demonstrated a benefit to sympathetic blockade in CRPS.

DISABILITY MEDICINE, The Official Periodical of the American Board of Independent Examiners,
Vol. 5 No. 3-4 July - December 2005
www.abime.org/documents/Journalv5n34.pdf

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

Friday, February 14, 2014

Surgical sympathectomy is rarely performed and its use remains controversial

Although improved in some, persistent or recurrent symptoms were present in all patients after six months postoperatively. Increased sensitivity of digital vessels to circulating catecholamines, nerve fiber regeneration or incomplete sympathectomy have been postulated to lead to recurrence. Five patients developed Horner's syndrome postoperatively. A portion of the stellate ganglion was intentionally resected in 3 of the 5 patients.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8370999

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

The graph shows an overall shorter survival rate of sympathectomised rats

Chemical sympathectomy was performed by double intraperitoneal administration of 6-hydroxydopamine (6OHDA) 100mg/1 kg. 6OHDA is a neurotoxin used for selective ablation of dopaminergic and noradrenergic neurons. YA cells AH-130 which typically grow as free cells in ascites were injected intraperitoneally in amount of 20 - 25 mil/2 ml.
               
                Four groups of Wistar rats (AnLab, Prague) weighing 150 - 175g were used in the experiment. An absolute control group (8 rats), and a control sympathectomised group (8 rats), a group injected with YA cells (16 rats) and the last group was sympathectomised and injected with YA cells (16 rats).
               
                After a week of acclimatization of rats to conditions of animal room, sympathectomy was performed. One week later, YA cells were applied. The incidence and growth of ascites, and mortality were monitored.

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