Lumbar sympathectomy is widely used in the treatment of peripheral vascular disease involving the lower extremity. The obvious increase in skin temperature postoperatively has led to the belief that there is a concommitant increase in perfusion of all tissues in the leg.
Recent evidence suggests that this increase in total blood flow represents, in the main, arteriovenous shunting with a little, if any effect on the nutritive blood flow at the tissue level. Studies aimed at investigating the effect of lumbar sympathectomy on regional tissue circulation have utilized the local clearance of radioactive isotopes. No significant change in the clearance of these substances in muscle have been noted following lumbar sympathectomy in man.
Tissue Blood Flow in the Canine Lower Limb Following Lumbar SympathectomyVASC ENDOVASCULAR SURG November 1972 6: 227-238,