For a full story on sympathectomy and consequences, look up nerve injury or denervation

"I think the surgeons may not be aware of the long term consequences of denervation" Ahmet Hoke M.D., Ph.D. FRCPC

Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience, Director, Neuromuscular Division Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Neurology


Saturday 25 October 2014

There are similarities between the delayed onset of the human pain state and the delayed rise in sensory peptides after sympathectomy

The effect of sympathectomy on the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) level in the rat primary trigeminal sensory neurone was investigated. Six weeks after bilateral removal of the superior cervical ganglion there was a 70% rise in the CGRP content of the iris and the pial arteries, a 34% rise in the concentration in the trigeminal ganglion but no change in the brainstem. The CGRP rise in both end organs suggests that this phenomenon may be common to all peripheral organs receiving combined sensory and sympathetic innervations. The lack of any rise in the brainstem CGRP content raises the possibility that this process spares central terminations. In contrast, the level of neuropeptide Y, a peptide mainly contained in sympathetic terminals, fell to 35% of control values in the iris and pial arteries whilst the trigeminal ganglion and brainstem concentrations remained unchanged. The possible relevance of these observations to the clinical syndrome of postsympathectomy pain (sympathalgia) is discussed. There are similarities between the delayed onset of the human pain state and the delayed rise in sensory peptides after sympathectomy.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3877546

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