Lung India (Jan 2015)

Thoracic sympathectomy for peripheral vascular disease can lead to severe bronchospasm and excessive bronchial secretions

  • Vikas Deep Goyal,
  • Bharti Gupta,
  • Sanjeev Kumar,
  • Sanjay Pal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0970-2113.148458
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 1
pp. 73 – 75

Abstract

Read online

A 57-year-old male patient suffering from Buerger′s disease presented with pre-gangrenous changes in right foot and ischemic symptoms in right hand. Computed tomographic angiography revealed diffuse distal disease not suitable for vascular bypass and angioplasty. Right lumbar sympathectomy was done using a retroperitoneal approach followed 1 year later by right thoracic sympathectomy using a transaxillary approach. Postoperatively, the patient had severe bronchospasm and excessive secretions in the respiratory tract resistant to theophylline and sympathomimetic group of drugs and without any clinical, laboratory and radiological evidence of infection. The patient was started on anticholinergics in anticipation that sympathectomy might have lead to unopposed cholinergic activity and the symptoms improved rapidly. The patient recovered well and was discharged on 10 th post-operative day.

Keywords