IntroductionHyperhidrosis is excessive sweating beyond the needs of thermoregulation. It is disease which mostly affects young people, often carrying a considerable amount of socio-economic implications. Thoracic sympathectomy is now considered to be the "gold standard" in the treatment of idiopathic hyperhidrosis of hands and armpits.AimAssessment of early effectiveness of thoracic sympathectomy using skin resistance measurements performed before surgery and in the postoperative period.Material and methodsA group of 20 patients with idiopathic excessive sweating of hands and the armpit was enrolled in the study. Patients underwent two-stage thoracic sympathectomy with resection of Th2-Th4 ganglions. The skin resistance measurements were made at six previously designated points on the day of surgery and the first day after the operation.ResultsIn all operated patients we obtained complete remission of symptoms on the first day after the surgery. Inhibition of sweating was confirmed using the standard starch iodine (Minor) test. At all measurement points we obtained a statistically significant increase of skin resistance, assuming p < 0.05. To check whether there is a statistically significant difference in the results before and after surgery we used sequence pairs Wilcoxon test.ConclusionsThoracic sympathectomy is an effective curative treatment for primary hyperhidrosis of hands and armpits. Statistically significant increase of skin resistance in all cases is a good method of assessing the effectiveness of the above surgery in the early postoperative period.
IntroductionOxidative stress appears to play an essential role as a secondary messenger in such physiological processes as apoptosis and survival as well as in proliferative signaling pathways. Oxidative damage is also considered to play a pivotal role in ageing, several degenerative diseases, and carcinogenesis. Lung cancer is the most common type of cancer, resulting in over 1.3 million deaths each year worldwide.AimThe aim of this study was to evaluate the activity of selected antioxidative enzymes in patients with lung cancer before and after radical surgery.Material and methodsThe study included 20 patients in the study group and 10 healthy volunteers in the control group. In the study group, blood samples were collected twice: one day before and one day after the operation. In the control group, blood samples were collected once. We estimated the activity of catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), and superoxide dismutase (SOD) in erythrocytes. The total antioxidant status in blood plasma was also determined.ResultsThe activity of the selected antioxidative enzymes was greater in the case of GPX and CAT after surgery; the results were statistically significant in the study group. The activity of SOD remained at a comparable level. The total antioxidant status also increased after surgery in the study group in comparison to its preoperative level.
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