If you are a patient who had sympathectomy - and the outcome was unexpected, - or if you are a medical professional who is well aware of the implications of surgical denervation, and share the concerns voiced in this petition, please add your name to it and mail it to the health minister.


You can contact Mia, ets.surgery@yahoo.com.au if you have any questions about this petition.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

This is how 'Australia’s leading source for trustworthy medical information' describes sympathectomy


"Sympathectomy is a procedure that is used to treat neuropathic pain. It interrupts the sympathetic nervous system either temporarily or permanently."
http://www.virtualmedicalcentre.com/medical-dictionary/alpha/s

Virtual Medical Centre
Australia’s leading source for trustworthy medical information written by health professionals.
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Sympathectomy is not minimally invasive


The term ‘‘minimally invasive surgery’’ was initially applied to coelioscopic procedures such as laparoscopic cholecystectomy and hernia repair, thoracoscopic sympathectomy, and arthroscopy, but has since been abandoned, because doing the same operation through a smaller incision is not necessarily less invasive. The term ‘‘minimally invasive parathyroidectomy’’ does not fully convey the nature of the techniques, and, as previously debated in the wider field of minimal-access surgery, carries connotations of increased safety that are not necessarily supported by the existing data [12].
Surg Clin N Am 84 (2004) 717–734
F. Fausto Palazzo, MS, FRCS(Gen),
Leigh W. Delbridge, MD, FACS*

Department of Surgery, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney 2065, NSW, Australia