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1 Section of Anesthesiology, Yale University School of Medicine, and Department of Anesthesia, Grace-New Haven Community Hospital, New Haven, Connecticut
Using an open-tipped platinum electrode in the skin of the lower extremities of normal subjects, it was found that preganglionic sympathetic denervation resulted in a decrease in skin oxygen tension. This, in the presence of cutaneous hyperemia, indicates a decrease in capillary blood flow during the period of denervation.
Submitted on March 5, 1959
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