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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Nov 2019
The management of compensatory sweating after thoracic sympathectomy.
- Hidehiro Yamamoto and Masayoshi Okada.
- Department of Surgery, Yamamoto-Hidehiro Clinic, Tokyo, Japan. Electronic address: bestets@yahoo.co.jp.
- J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2019 Nov 1; 158 (5): 1481-1488.
ObjectiveThe main therapeutic method of treatment for local hyperhidrosis is endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy. Generally, resections of the sympathetic trunk or ganglia are performed between the second rib and sixth rib. However, this procedure can result in compensatory sweating, in which excess sweating occurs on the back, chest, and abdomen. Compensatory sweating has been regarded as a thermoregulatory response and thought to be untreatable. This study suggests that compensatory sweating is not a physiologic reaction and is indeed treatable.MethodsEight patients with severe compensatory sweating were treated by observing blood perfusion of the skin with laser speckle flowgraphy, which determines the sympathetic nerves related to the area of skin with compensatory sweating. When intraoperative monitoring with laser speckle flowgraphy indicated the position of compensatory sweating by electrical stimulation of the sympathetic ganglion, ganglionectomy was performed.ResultsThe skin domain that each sympathetic nerve controls was able to be detected by laser speckle flowgraphy. In all patients, compensatory sweating was resolved after interruption of the ganglia or sympathetic nerves related to compensatory sweating.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that compensatory sweating is caused by denatured sympathetic nerves influenced by endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy and is not the result of a physiological response. With laser speckle flowgraphy, the sympathetic nerve related to the sweating of various parts of the body could be identified. The treatment of compensatory sweating on the back, chest, and stomach was previously considered to be difficult; however, compensatory sweating is demonstrated to be treatable with this technique.Copyright © 2019 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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