A simple technique for local chemical sympathectomy of peripheral tissues is described using guanethidine. Multiple microinjections of guanethidine were made into inguinal or epididymal white adipose tissue (IWAT and EWAT) pads or spleens of hamsters. Guanethidine virtually abolished the sympathetic innervation of both EWAT and IWAT, as measured by the absence of significant norepinephrine (NE) tissue content two weeks later and as suggested by the two-fold increase in IWAT mass characteristic of surgically induced WAT denervation. These measures were not affected in the contralateral pads given equivolumetric injections of saline. Guanethidine injections into the spleen lead to a functional sympathectomy, as indicated by significant depletions of NE content. Because guanethidine treatment did not decrease body mass, induce ptosis, or spread to closely associated adjacent tissue (contralateral EWAT pad), no chemical-induced malaise or global sympathetic denervation was suggested. Guanethidine was more effective than two other local sympathectomy treatments, injections of the sympathetic neurotoxin anti-dopamine-beta -hydroxylase saporin or surgical denervation, in decreasing IWAT NE content and increasing IWAT pad mass. Collectively, these results suggest that locally applied, chemical sympathectomy with guanethidine provides an effective, restricted method for sympathectomizing WAT, spleen and likely other peripheral tissues. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.