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, June 11, 2009

Emotion - Autonomic activation - Feedback

Background: Following emotional stimuli, changes in heart rate,
blood pressure and sudomotor activity, which are associated with
changes in regional cerebral activity, feedback to influence the
expression of emotional feelings. In spinal cord injury (SCI), the
efferent generation of sympathetic responses and afferent sensory
feedback of visceral state is impaired, and the integration of bodily
arousal and emotion is altered.


During conditioning-related brain
activity SCI patients, compared to controls, showed attenuation of
subgenual cingulate, ventromedial prefrontal and posterior cingu-
late cortex activity and enhancement of dorsal anterior cingulate,
periaqueductal grey matter and superior temporal gyrus activity.
Conclusion. Our findings suggest impairment in emotion-related
generation of autonomic bodily responses and abnormalities in
brain regions associated with emotional control in patients with
SCI. These early findings warrant further development to support
prevention of emotional dysfunction in SCI.

Clin Auton Res (2007) 17:264–327

Bradycardia likely, compensatory sweating obligatory

Patient?s informed consent should include and define side effects like gustatory sweating, olfactory sweating and bradycardia as likely, and compensatory sweating as obligatory.

Clinical Autonomic Research; Dec2003 Supplement 1, Vol. 13, p0, 1p

Sympathectomy on cerebral and peripheral muscular arteries

Differing influence of sympathectomy on smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts in cerebral and peripheral muscular arteries.
Source:
Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic & Clinical; Jan2006, Vol. 124 Issue 1/2, p38-48, 11p
In contrast to intact FAs, the external layers of sympathectomized FAs revealed migration of fibroblasts from the adventitia and death of SMCs. These results strongly suggest that sympathetic nerves intervene in the cytoskeletal protein remodelling through phenotypic modulation of both SMCs and MFBs during post-natal development, and in pathologies involving similar phenomena, such as atherosclerosis. [Copyright 2006 Elsevier] ( femoral (FA) and basilar (BA) arteries.)

unable to establish the etiology of 'Compensatory Sweating'

Bilateral upper thoracic sympathicolysis is followed by redistribution of body perspiration, with a clear decrease in the zones regulated by mental or emotional stimuli, and an increase in the areas regulated by environmental stimuli, though we are unable to establish the etiology of this redistribution.
Surgical Endoscopy; Nov2007, Vol. 21 Issue 11, p2030-2033, 4p, 2 charts

Impaired chronotropic response to exercise stress testing as a predictor of mortality

Chronotropic incompetence, an attenuated heart rate response to exercise, is a predictor of all-cause mortality in healthy populations. This association may be independent of exercise-induced myocardial perfusion defects.
Michael S Lauer, Gary S Francis, Peter M Okin, Fredric J Pashkow, et al. JAMA. Chicago:Feb 10, 1999. Vol. 281, Iss. 6, p. 524-9 (6 pp.)

cardiopulmonary function impairment after ETS

This article focuses on a study related to evaluating the cardiopulmonary function impairment after sympathectomy in patients with essential hyperhidrosis. The observed modifications in cardiopulmonary function after bilateral dorsal sympathectomy suggest that there is a slight effect of the intervention on the small airway, as evidenced by the presence of bronchial hyperresponsiveness in half of the studied patients and on a mild reduction in maximal hear rate.

CHEST; Oct2005, Vol. 128 Issue 4, p2702-2705, 4p

disturbances in the sympathetic regulation of the peripheral blood flow

Finger skin blood flow was measured in 80 healthy subjects, using laser Doppler imaging during basal vasodilatation at a local temperature of 40°C. The response to cooling of the contralateral hand at 15°C was studied. A vasoconstriction index was calculated in all subjects and a nomogram was constructed, taking age into consideration. Compared with these normal subjects, four patients operated on with transthoracic endoscopic sympathectomy due to hand hyperhidrosis showed clearly attenuated responses. The results indicate that the test can be used to assess disturbances in the sympathetic regulation of the peripheral blood flow.
Clinical Physiology; Mar1998, Vol. 18 Issue 2, p103-107, 5p

Reduced HRV and baroreflex sensitivity as universally applicable cardiovascular “risk factors”

Murray Esler
Elisabeth Lambert

Reduced HRV and baroreflex sensitivity as universally applicable cardiovascular “risk factors”: waiting for the bubble to burst

Clin Auton Res (2003) 13:170–172

cardiovascular response to different levels of sympathetic blockade varies widely

Individual cardiovascular response to different levels of sympathetic blockade varies widely, depending on the degree of sympathetic tone before the block.

It was suggested that the sympathetic control of heart rate modified the dominating parasympathetic tone, rather than functioning as an active cardiac accelerator. In this study there was no compensation for changes in preload; therefore cardiopulmonary baroreceptors affected by changes in central volume secondary to peripheral vasodilatation or vasoconstriction might have altered arterial baroreceptor heart rate reflex as well. To minimize that influence, Goertz et al gave plasma volume expanders to equalize left ventricular preload conditions as assessed by transesophageal echocardiography". High TEA added to general anaesthesia significantly decreased the cardiac acceleration in response to decreasing blood pressure, suggesting that baroreflex-mediated heart rate response to a decrease in arterial blood pressure depends on the integrity of the sympathetic nervous system. However general anaesthesia, in addition to high levels of epidural anaesthesia, may have modified the balance between sympathetic and parasympathetic tone as well.

B T Veering, M J Cousins. Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. Edgecliff:Dec 2000. Vol. 28, Iss. 6, p. 620-35 (16 pp.)
Copyright Australian Society of Anaesthetists Dec 2000