Sympathectomy developed in the mid-19th century, when it was learned that the
autonomic nervous system runs to almost every organ, gland and muscle system in the body. It was surmised that these nerves play a role in how the body regulates many different body functions in response to changes in the external environment, and in emotion. The first sympathectomy was performed by Alexander in 1889. Thoracic sympathectomy has been indicated for
hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating) since 1920, when Kotzareff showed it would cause
anhidrosis (total inability to sweat) from the
nipple line upwards. A lumbar sympathectomy was also developed and used to treat excessive sweating of the feet and other ailments, and typically resulted in
impotence and retrograde ejaculation in men. Lumbar sympathectomy is still being offered as a treatment for plantar hyperhidrosis, or as a treatment for patients who have a bad outcome (extreme 'compensatory sweating') after thoracic sympathectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis or blushing; however, extensive sympathectomy risks
hypotension. Endoscopic sympathectomy itself is relatively easy to perform; however, accessing the nerve tissue in the chest cavity by conventional surgical methods was difficult, painful, and spawned several different approaches in the past. The
posterior approach was developed in 1908, and required
resection (sawing off) of ribs. A supraclavicular (above the collar-bone) approach was developed in 1935, which was less painful than the posterior, but was more prone to damaging delicate
nerves and
blood vessels. Because of these difficulties, and because of disabling
sequelae associated with sympathetic denervation, conventional or "open" sympathectomy was never a popular procedure, although it continued to be practiced for hyperhidrosis,
Raynaud's disease, and various psychiatric disorders. With the brief popularization of
lobotomy in the 1940s, sympathectomy fell out of favor as a form of
psychosurgery. The endoscopic version of thoracic sympathectomy was pioneered by Goren Claes and Christer Drott in
Sweden in the late 1980s. The development of
endoscopic "minimally invasive" surgical techniques has decreased the recovery time from the surgery and increased its availability. Today, ETS surgery is practiced in many countries throughout the world predominantly by vascular surgeons. ==See also==