"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, The Journal of Pain, Vol 1, No 4 (Winter), 2000: pp 258-260
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, February 3, 2011
Surgical sympathectomy listed as neurologic disorder
- Idiopathic orthostatic hypotension
- Multiple sclerosis
- Parkinsonism
- Posterior fossa tumor
- Shy-Drager syndrome
- Spinal cord injury with paraplegia
- Surgical sympathectomy
- Syringomyelia
- Syringobulbia
- Tabes dorsales (syphillis)
- Wernicke's encephalopathy
Dizziness: Classification and Pathophysiology
The Journal of Manual and Manipulative Therapy, Vol. 12, No 4 (2004)
Post-sympathectomy neuralgia: hypotheses on peripheral and central neuronal mechanisms
Post-sympathectomy neuralgia is proposed here to be a complex neuropathic and central deafferentation/reafferentation syndrome dependent on: (a) the transection, during sympathectomy, of paraspinal somatic and visceral afferent axons within the sympathetic trunk; (b) the subsequent cell death of many of the axotomized afferent neurons, resulting in central deafferentation; and (c) the persistent sensitization of spinal nociceptive neurons by painful conditions present prior to sympathectomy. Viscerosomatic convergence, collateral sprouting of afferents, and mechanisms associated with sympathetically maintained pain are all proposed to be important to the development of the syndrome.
Author Keywords: Deafferentation; Central sensitization; Viscero-somatic convergence; Ectopic discharge; Sympathetically maintained pain
Pain
Volume 64, Issue 1, January 1996, Pages 1-9
Ectopic discharge in injured nerves: comparison of trigeminal and somatic afferent
Brain Research
Volume 579, Issue 1, 1 May 1992, Pages 148-151
inhibition of sympathetic activity and a possible impairment of endothelial function
Endothelial dysfunction, or the loss of proper endothelial function, is a hallmark for vascular diseases, and often leads to atherosclerosis.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endothelium
Cervical sympathectomy, the method to create (experimental) vasomotor rhinitis
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Axonal injury not only induces muscle weakness and loss of sensation but also leads to adaptive responses and neuropathic pain
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10219748
Peripheral nerve injury triggers a series of responses
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2009;336:169-86.
PMID: 19688334 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Effect of sympathectomy on the expression of NMDA receptors in the spinal cord
J Neurol Sci (1999) 169: 156-60.
http://www.ionchannels.org/showabstract.php?pmid=10540025
Sympathectomy induces adrenergic excitability of cutaneous C-fiber nociceptors
Catecholamine sensitivity of cat leg vessels after sympathectomy
ajplegacy.physiology.org/content/212/2/466.full.pdf
nerve damage causes an inflammatory response
eicosanoids; these mediators may contribute to the hyperalgesia which results from nerve injury. The cell types most likely to be responsible include macrophages and postganglionic sympathetic neurones.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/pjh3832058475340/
D. J. Tracey1 J. S. Walker1
School of Anatomy, University of New South Wales, 2052 Sydney, NSW, Australia
The brain and the immune system are the two major adaptive systems of the body. During an immune response the brain and the immune system “talk to each other” and this process is essential for maintaininghomeostasis. Two major pathway systems are involved in this cross-talk: the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the sympathetic nervous system (SNS). This overview focuses on the role of SNS in neuroimmune interactions, an area that has received much less attention than the role of HPA axis. Evidence accumulated over the last 20 years suggests that norepinephrine (NE) fulfills the criteria for neurotransmitter/neuromodulator in lymphoid organs.
http://pharmrev.aspetjournals.org/content/52/4/595.abstract
TNF at a site of immunological injury may lead to chronic activation of innate immune cells and to chronic inflammatory responses
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10577971
The NPY Family of Peptides in Immune Disorders, Inflammation, Angiogenesis and Cancer
NPY, NPY receptors and DPPIV in innate immunity and autoimmune disorders
Book | The NPY Family of Peptides in Immune Disorders, Inflammation, Angiogenesis and Cancer |
Publisher | Birkhäuser Basel |
DOI | 10.1007/3-7643-7427-6 |
Copyright | 2005 |
ISBN | 978-3-7643-7159-3 (Print) 978-3-7643-7427-3 (Online) page 71: Lewis rats are much more likely to develop autoimmune disorders after sympathectomy (Dimitrova and Felten, 1995). This finding suggests that if sympathetic regulation were impaired in a genetically predisposed individual, an autoimmune disease might develop. Betrayal by the Brain: The Neurologic Basis of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia Syndrome and Related Neural Network Disorders by Jay A. Goldstein published by The Haworth Medical Press, 1996 |
Chest wall paresthesia affects a significant but previously overlooked proportion of patients
The rates and characteristics of the paresthesia following needlescopic VATS are similar to those observed after conventional VATS. CONCLUSIONS: Chest wall paresthesia affects a significant but previously overlooked proportion of patients following needlescopic VATS, but has minimal impact on post-operative satisfaction. Needlescopic VATS offers no apparent advantage over conventional VATS with regard to paresthesia.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15691688?dopt=Abstract
Postsympathectomy syndrome
Melatonin levels markedly reduced after sympathectomy
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 72: 819–823, 1991
Similar pathological effects of sympathectomy and hypercholesterolemia on arterial smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts
Both intact and sympathectomized BA and FA developed atherosclerotic plaques, but the thickening of the intima was more advanced in sympathectomized animals, as judged by increased plaque frequency and by the phenotypic modulation of SMCs in the intima. Our results show that in the media of FAs hypercholesterolemia induces changes similar to those observed in sympathectomized rabbits in non-pathological conditions, i.e., migration of adventitial FBs to the media and loss of medial SMCs. These latter changes, which can be ascribed to pathological events, were accentuated after sympathectomy in the hypercholesterolemic rabbits. The present study reveals that pathological events, including migration and phenotypic modulation of vascular FBs and loss of SMCs, may be under the influence of sympathetic nerves.
Acta Histochemica; Jul2008, Vol. 110 Issue 4, p302-313, 12p
- Kacem, K.1 kamel.kacem@fsb.rnu.tn
Sercombe, R.2 r.sercombe@orange.fr
Anti-inflammatory role of sympathetic nerves in chronic intestinal inflammation
Straub, R. H.1 rainer.straub@klinik.uni-regensburg.de
Gut; Jul2008, Vol. 57 Issue 7, p911-921,
Monday, January 31, 2011
Immunoglobulin producing cells in the rat dental pulp after unilateral sympathectomy
Neuroscience; Jan2006, Vol. 136 Issue 2, p571-577, 7p
- Haug, S.R. sivakami.rethnam@biomed.uib.no
Heyeraas, K.J.1
Effect of sympathetic denervation on the rate of protein synthesis in rat skeletal muscle
American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology & Metabolism; Apr2004, Vol. 49 Issue 4, pE642-E647, 6p
The effect of cervical sympathectomy on retinal vessel responses to systemic autonomic stimulation
Eye (Lond). 1990;4 ( Pt 1):181-9.
PMID: 2323469 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
lead to hyperfunction of the serotoninergic system and pathology
Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, Vol. 140, No. 5, 2005 PHYSIOLOGY
increased blood supply is associated with decreased vascular permeability
sympathectomy.
In confirmation of previous experiments, it was found in a great majority of experiments that, in spite of marked vasodilatation, the dye excretion was considerably reduced on the sympathectomised side.
A permeability factor under the influence of the sympathetic nervous system has been postulated; its character and mechanism is still unknown.
Further unpublished experiments seem to support the view that increased blood supply is associated with decreased vascular permeability.
Res Exp Med (Berl) 173, 1--8 (1978)
Several distinct morphological alterations were observed
Journal of Neural Transmission 38, 43--57 (1976)
Tumor onset was significantly increased in animals sympathectomized as either neonates or as adults
"We showed that IL-1alpha was increased but not TNF-alpha . . .on the sympathectomized side. Both IL-1alpha and TNF-alpha were expressed in unexposed pulp. TNF-alpha was significantly decreased in the denervated incisor pulp, whereas the level of IL-1alpha remained unchanged." (Bletsa et al. 2004, emphasis added)
"Accumulating evidence suggests that the sympathetic nervous system modulates inflammatory responses and bone remodeling."(Haug et al. 2003
"Tumor onset time following implantation of MNB cells was significantly increased in animals sympathectomized as either neonates or as adults." (Fink et al. 1987)
http://editthis.info/corposcindosis/Changes_to_Systemic_Function,_part_2
alterations in the relative abundance of TH mRNA mediate changes in TH activity induced by chronic stress or sympathectomy
Journal of Neuroscience Research
Published Online: 11 Oct 2004
marked dysaesthesia over the front of the chest and in the axilla
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1114879
three-phase bone scan (TPBS) after sympathectomy are identical to those reported in early RSD
The Clinical Journal of Pain: June 1994 - Volume 10 - Issue 2
Long-Term Denervation of Vascular Smooth Muscle Causes Not Only Functional but Structural Change
Rosemary D. Bevan, Hiromichi Tsuru
Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Calif.
Address of Corresponding Author
Blood Vessels 1979;16:109-112 (DOI: 10.1159/000158197)
Sympathectomy induces adrenergic excitability of cutaneous C-fiber nociceptors
J Neurophysiol 1996;75:514-7.
Sympathectomy resulted in marked reduction of dopamine beta-hydroxylase immunoreactivity
dopamine beta-hydroxylase (Dbh-/-), the enzyme responsible for synthesizing norepinephrine and epinephrine from dopamine,
Dbh - dopamine beta hydroxylase
Sympathectomy resulted in marked reduction of dopamine beta-hydroxylase immunoreactivity with no appreciable change in galanin immunoreactivity. ...www.ihop-net.org/UniPub/iHOP/gs/321789.html - 342k
NASA Technical Reports Server
Anti-dopamine beta-hydroxylase immunotoxin administration produces a rapid, irreversible sympathectomy. NASA Center: NASA (non Center Specific) ...ntrs.nasa.gov/
Serum Dopamine-beta-Hydroxylase (DBH) Activity and Blood Pressure ...
Serum Dopamine-beta-Hydroxylase (DBH) Activity ..... Weinshilboum R, Axelrod J: Serum dopamine-^-hydroxylase: Decrease after chemical sympathectomy. ...www.psychosomaticmedicine.org/cgi/reprint/36/4/298.pdf
dopamine-ß -hydroxylase activity in the sympathetic ganglia is blocked by surgical decentralization
PNAS | June 15, 1970 | vol. 66 | no. 2 | 453-458
Copyright © 1970 by the National Academy of Sciences
Neurally Mediated Increase in Dopamine-ß -hydroxylase Activity
The development of a sensitive and specific enzymatic assay for dopamine-ß -hydroxylase has enabled us to measure the activity of this enzyme in several tissues where it has not previously been measured. The administration of reserpine leads to an increase in dopamine-ß -hydroxylase activity in the rat adrenal, heart, salivary gland, and in sympathetic ganglia. The increase in the heart is preceded by a small but significant fall. We have confirmed the increase in tyrosine hydroxylase which follows the administration of reserpine and have found that the activity of phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase also increases after administration of this drug. The activities of two enzymes not involved in the synthesis of catecholamines, monoamine oxidase and lactate dehydrogenase, are not affected by reserpine treatment. The rise of dopamine-ß -hydroxylase activity in the sympathetic ganglia is blocked by surgical decentralization.
chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxy-dopamine reproduces many of the ocular phenomena of surgical sympathectomy
Anterior Segment Chemical Sympathectomy by 6-Hydroxy-Dopamine
I. Effect on Intraocular Pressure and Facility of Outflow
1 Department of Ophthalmology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, La.
Histofluorometric techniques have confirmed that topical ocular application of 6-hydroxydopamine, a norepinephrine congener, causes a selective and reversible destruction of sympathetic nerve terminals in the anterior segment. An investigation of the effects of "chemical sympathectomy" on the pupil, intraocular pressure, and facility of outflow showed: the pupil underwent a sequence of changes characteristic of surgical sympathetic denervation, but with a different time course; the intraocular pressure .was significantly lowered, transiently in rabbits and of longer duration in monkeys; the facility of outflow was transiently increased in monkeys and probably in rabbits; the episcleral venous pressure was unchanged in both species. It was concluded that the lowered intraocular pressure and lowered outflow pressure were the result of a reduction of aqueous inflow. There was no unequivocal experimental demonstration of supersensitization to topical norepinephrine or isoproterenol following chemical sympathetic denervation; however, the experiments were not conclusive on this important point. It was concluded that chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxy-dopamine reproduces many of the ocular phenomena of surgical sympathectomy. 6-Hydroxy-dopamine is a useful drug for experimental ophthalmology, and may be useful clinically.
(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 1971;10:120-143.)
© 1971 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Chemical sympathectomy disrupts the only known neural input to the pineal gland
- The Pineal Gland: A Pacemaker within the Circadian System of the House Sparrow
- Natille Headrick Zimmerman and Michael Menaker
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 76, No. 2 (Feb., 1979), pp. 999-1003 (article consists of 5 pages)
Serum dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and depression
Friedhelm Lamprecht1, Michael H. Ebert1, Ibrahim Turek1, 2 and Irwin J. Kopin1
(1) | Laboratory of Clinical Science, NIMH, 20014 Bethesda, Maryland |
(2) | Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, Catonsville, Maryland |
Received: 18 June 1974
Journal | Psychopharmacology |
Publisher | Springer Berlin / Heidelberg |
ISSN | 0033-3158 (Print) 1432-2072 (Online) |
Issue | Volume 40, Number 3 / September, 1974 |
DBH deficiency - depresssion and schizophrenia
Since norepinephrine and its receptor sites have long been postulated to play a role in a number of psychiatric disorders, the essentially normal mood and mental status of adult DBH-deficiency subjects so far encountered has elicited great interest among investigators in the area of depression and schizophrenia.
http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/root/vumc.php?site=adc&doc=4792
Dopamine beta-hydroxylase deficiency impairs cellular immunity
Vol. 8, No. 4, 2000
Free Abstract Article (References) Article (PDF 227 KB)
Original Paper
Interferon-Gamma Release in Sympathetically Denervated Rat Submaxillary Lymph Nodes
Patricia O. Castrillóna, Daniel P. Cardinalib, AgustÃn Arcea, Rodolfo A. Cutrerab, Ana I. Esquifinoa
Autonomic dysfunction and multiple sclerosis
DOI: 10.1177/135245850100700509
© 2001 SAGE Publications
Autonomic dysfunction in multiple sclerosis is related to disease activity and progression of disability
Karlheinz Reiners
Miriam Krauser
Annalaska Wolf
Klaus V Toyka
Background: Autonomic dysfunction is frequently observed in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) but the evolution over time and the relationship to clinical characteristics are not yet established.
Objectives: We investigated the correlation of disease activity and progression of disability with composite scores of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction and serum levels of catecholamines in a cross-sectional study of patients with clinically active and clinically stable MS.
Results: In the cross-sectional study, the number of patients with at least one abnormal sympathetic test was higher in the `active' patient group (39%) than in healthy controls (8%, P50.02) or `stable' patients (0%, P50.04), while no difference was seen in the parasympathetic score. Median catecholamine levels were significantly lower in `active' MS patients than in those with stable disease (norepinephrine, 204 ng/l (interquartile range 158-310 ng/l) vs 363 ng/l (269-507 ng/l), P50.02 and epinephrine, 23 ng/l (16-28 ng/l) vs 32 ng/l (24-107 ng/l), P50.04). In the subgroup of patients studied longitudinally, parasympathetic but not sympathetic dysfunction increased slightly during the follow-up period, with a significant correlation to the increase in clinical disability (r=0.7, P50.002).
Conclusions: Parasympathetic dysfunction was closely related to the progression of disability in patients with MS. In contrast, sympathetic dysfunction was associated to the clinical activity of MS. This is in line with previous observations suggesting that the autonomic nervous system may be intimately linked with the disordered immune regulation in MS.
Rheumatoid arthritis and Autonomic Neuropathy
Rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and other connective tissue disorders may have abnormalities of sympathetic postganglionic function. Some of these patients may have autoantibodies to ganglionic acetylcholine receptors. Autoimmune thyroiditis, as with chronic thyroiditis and Hashimoto thyroiditis, can be associated with some features of Sjögren syndrome such as xerostomia. Patients with systemic sclerosis and mixed connective tissue disorder may have abnormalities of autonomic functioning of esophageal motor activity.
Pain following endoscopic sympathectomy
Medical Devices & Surgical Technology Week. Atlanta: Sep 6, 2009. pg. 203
sympathectomy increased the bacterial tissue burden
The Journal of Infectious Diseases. Chicago: Aug 15, 2005. Vol. 192, Iss. 4; pg. 560, 13 pgs
peripheral sympathetic denervation may modulate immune function via activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2000;917:923-34.
Increasing evidence suggests that the detrimental effects of glucocorticoid (GC) hypersecretion occur by activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in several human pathologies, including obesity, Alzheimer's disease, AIDS dementia, and depression. The different patterns of response by the HPA axis during chronic activation are an important consideration in selecting an animal model to assess HPA axis function in a particular disorder.
Detrimental effects of chronic hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation. From obesity to memory deficits
Raber J Mol Neurobiol 1998 Aug; 18(1): 1-22
NMDA and Sympathectomy
The Effects of NMDA Antagonists and Sympathectomy on the c-Fos mRNA Expression in the Neuropathic Rat.
http://www.koreamed.org/SearchBasic.php?DT=1&RID=47481
Adrenal Tyrosine Hydroxylase: Compensatory Increase in Activity after Chemical Sympathectomy
Science 31 January 1969:
Vol. 163. no. 3866, pp. 468 - 469
DOI: 10.1126/science.163.3866.468
Changes in Parathyroid Hormone and Calcium Levels
23-26 h after SCGx there is a significant impairment of homeostatic iPTH responses to low Ca levels which can be overcome by suitable Ca stimulus; (3) circulating catecholamines may affect denervated parathyroid cells, as revealed by the changes in serum iPTH and Ca elicited by - and -adrenoceptor-blocker treatment of SCGx rats.
Daniel P. Cardinali, Marta G. Ladizesky
Vol. 40, No. 4, 1985
Structural changes of arteries after sympathectomy
Effect of sympathectomy on arterial and venous changes in renal hypertensive rats
G. SimonAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 241: H449-H454, 1981;
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Tumor necrosis factor-a induces oligodendrocytes apoptosis
http://www.springerlink.com/content/mu032lj427l85701/
Oligodendrocyte apoptosis and primary demyelination
We demonstrate that local production of TNF (tumor necrosis factor) by central nervous system glia potently and selectively induces oligodendrocyte apoptosis and myelin vacuolation in the context of an intact blood-brain barrier and absence of immune cell infiltration into the central nervous system parenchyma. Interestingly, primary demyelination then develops in a classical manner in the presence of large numbers of recruited phagocytic macrophages, possibly the result of concomitant pro-inflammatory effects of TNF in the central nervous system, and lesions progress into acute or chronic MS-type plaques with axonal damage, focal blood-brain barrier disruption, and considerable oligodendrocyte loss. Both the cytotoxic and inflammatory effects of TNF were abrogated in mice genetically deficient for the p55TNF receptor demonstrating a dominant role for p55TNF receptor-signaling pathways in TNF-mediated pathology.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9736029
Denervation resulted in increased production of tumor necrosis factor-α
linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0889159100906184
cytokines mediate and control immune and inflammatory responses
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16166805
Alterations in cytokine and antibody production following chemical sympathectomy
http://www.jimmunol.org/cgi/content/abstract/155/10/4613
dysregulation between the nervous and immune systems might contribute to disease development and progression
http://www.jleukbio.org/cgi/content/abstract/79/6/1093
TNF at a site of immunological injury may lead to chronic activation of innate immune cells and to chronic inflammatory responses
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10577971
Abnormal pain following nerve sprouting
Received 22 October 2004, revised 17 February 2005, accepted 23 February 2005
Sympathectomy causes diminished capacity for physical sensation
Results: In the hot-plate analgesia test, sympathectomized rats increased their hot-plate latency time compared with that of sham-operated rats. Density of calcitonin gene-related peptide immunoreactive fibers in sympathectomy side of the lumbar dura mater decreased to 45.5% compared with the contralateral side. The number and size of calcitonin gene-related peptide immunoreactive cells in dorsal root ganglia showed no difference between sympathectomized and contralateral side.
Conclusion: Sympathectomy increased the pain threshold and made the sympathectomized rats hypesthetic.An Anatomic Study of Neuropeptide Immunoreactivities in the Lumbar Dura Mater After Lumbar Sympathectomy.
Spine. 21(8):925-930, April 15, 1996.
Long-term superior cervical sympathectomy induces mast cell hyperplasia and increases histamine and serotonin content
After unilateral ganglionectomy, the histamine content increased progressively and significantly 30–60 days post-surgery in both hemi-dura, whereas the serotonin content became significantly different from that of sham only 60 days post-surgery in the ipsilateral dura. After bilateral ganglionectomy, the histamine level significantly increased in both hemi-dura 15–60 days post-surgery, whereas the serotonin level had significantly increased at 60 days post-surgery.
These results clearly demonstrate, for the first time, a long-term trophic effect of sympathetic nerve degeneration on mast cells in the dura mater.
A. Bergerot*, A. -M. Reynier-Rebuffel†, J. Callebert‡ and P. Aubineau
Copyright © 1999 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.
Substance P has a proinflammatory role
Brain Behav Immun. 2007 Jul;21(5):528-34. Epub 2007 May 22.
Sympathectomy suppresses cell-mediated (T helper-1) responses
Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol. 1995;35:417-48.
Norepinephrine activates pain pathways after nerve injury
Animal studies indicate that norepinephrine, a catecholamine released from sympathetic nerves, acquires the capacity to activate pain pathways after tissue or nerve injury, resulting in RSD.
http://arthritis.about.com/od/rsd/a/rsd.htm
Insulin hypersensitivity produced by sympathectomy
THE HYPOTHALAMUS: A REVIEW OF THE EXPERIMENTAL DATA
W. R. Ingram
Psychosom Med, Vol. 1, Issue 1, 48-91, January 1, 1939
sympathetic denervation is one of the causes of Monckeberg's sclerosis regardless of diabetes mellitus
In conclusion, sympathetic denervation is one of the causes of Monckeberg's sclerosis regardless of diabetes mellitus.
Diabetologia. 1983 May;24(5):347-50, PMID: 6873514 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Goebel FD, Fuessl HS.
Sympathectomy-induced alterations of immunity
Activation of the CNS was determined by immunocytochemical visualization of Fos protein in brains from male C57BL/6 mice at 8, 24, and 48 h following denervation. A dramatic induction of Fos protein was found in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus and other specific brain regions at 8 and 24 h compared to vehicle control mice. Dual-antigen labeling demonstrates that corticotrophin releasing factor (CRF)-containing neurons in the PVN are activated by chemical sympathectomy; however, neurons containing neurotransmitters which may modulate CRF neurons, such as vasopressin, tyrosine hydroxylase, and adrenocorticotropin, do not coexpress Fos. Our findings suggest an involvement of the CNS in sympathectomy-induced alterations of immunity.
Tracy A. Callahan, Jan A. Moynihan and Diane T. Piekut
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
Volume 12, Issue 3, September 1998, Pages 230-241
chronic sympathectomy on muscle fibre composition
We have previously reported functional and histological studies in five beagle dogs with unilateral lumbar sympathectomy. Three months later, fatiguability in the gracilis muscles was increased on the denervated sides, and this was associated with an increase in the relative distribution of FT fibres. Biochemical studies now show that these changes were associated with an increase in cytosolic protein without change in DNA content; this is consistent with an increase in cell size. There was a reduction in the proportion of slow myosin light chain isoforms from 50 +/- 7 to 34 +/- 6%. Noradrenaline levels were increased on the denervated sides but this may reflect greater vascularity. Calcium content did not correlate with fibre type but there was a positive relation with both noradrenaline content (r = 0.73; P less than 0.05) and DNA content (r = 0.84; P less than 0.05). It is concluded that sympathectomy induces several biochemical changes in skeletal muscle which constitute a change and increase in fast myosin light chain synthesis and a corresponding fibre type transformation.
Clin Physiol. 1988 Apr;8(2):181-91.
Supersensitivity to noradrenaline and chronic neuropathic pain conditions
These observations indicate that prolonged depletion of adrenergic stores by guanethidine induces adrenergic supersensitivity in cutaneous vessels, and that adrenergic supersensitivity enhances thermal hyperalgesia in the presence of noradrenaline.
Autonomic Neuroscience
Volume 88, Issues 1-2, 12 April 2001, Pages 86-93