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Acute effects of periarterial sympathectomy on the cutaneous microcirculation
Author(s) -
Pollock David C.,
Li Zhongyu,
Rosencrance Eileen,
Krome Jonathan,
Koman L. Andrew,
Smith Thomas L.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of orthopaedic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.041
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1554-527X
pISSN - 0736-0266
DOI - 10.1002/jor.1100150313
Subject(s) - sympathectomy , microcirculation , medicine , anatomy , anesthesia
The clinical effects of peripheral sympathectomy on patients with vaso‐occlusive disease are often dramatic and include relief of pain, improved quality of life, and healing of ulcers. Peripheral periarterial sympathectomy is known to increase skin temperature and to maximize the nutritional component of peripheral blood flow, but the pathophysiology of vaso‐occlusive disease and the physiologic mechanisms of this treatment are unknown. In this study, the acute effects of periarterial sympathectomy were directly observed in a rabbit ear model of digital microcirculation (arterioles, arteriovenous anastomoses, and venules). The effects of periarterial sympathectomy on cutaneous perfusion and total flow were also examined using laser Doppler. Perfusion imaging and digital temperature measurements. The central auricular artery became dilated (50–100%) immediately after sympathectomy; the arterioles, arteriovenous anastomoses, and venules dilated to 165,156, and.223%, respectively, at 30 minutes and to 187,174, and 204%, respectively, at 60 minutes, relative to their baseline diameters prior to sympathectomy. Laser Doppler perfusion imaging values and ear temperatures were noted to increase after sympathectomy (8.9%, 3°C), although the core temperature of the rabbit did not change. Thus, acute periarterial sympathectomy can (a) effectively reduce the vascular tone of the distal microvasculature and (b) increase total microcirculatory perfusion—cutaneous and thermoregulatory—by both venular and arteriolar dilation. Periarterial sympathectomy has the clinical potential to increase nutritional blood flow, thereby ameliorating the signs and symptoms of ischemia associated with thermoregulatory abnormalities. Dilation of the arteriovenous anastomoses, with a subsequent reduction in vascular resistance, may contribute to the increased cutaneous temperature noted after sympathectomy.

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