Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve

The external laryngeal nerve (ELN) is a slender branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) which primarily innervates the cricothyroid and inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscles. However, the exact nature of fibers which are contained in this nerve has not been ascertained yet. To this purpose, g...

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Main Author: Khan, Aliza Shahid
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Stallion Publication 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18
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spelling ftjsjmars:oai:ojs2.sjmars.com:article/18 2023-06-11T04:10:51+02:00 Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve Khan, Aliza Shahid 2022-08-31 application/pdf https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18 eng eng Stallion Publication https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18/17 https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18 Copyright (c) 2022 Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies; Vol. 1 No. 4 (2022): August Issue; 1-5 2583-3340 Ganglion nodosum cervical sympathetic chain acetylcholinesterase laryngeal nerve loop info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2022 ftjsjmars 2023-05-06T18:24:36Z The external laryngeal nerve (ELN) is a slender branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) which primarily innervates the cricothyroid and inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscles. However, the exact nature of fibers which are contained in this nerve has not been ascertained yet. To this purpose, gross dissection was carried out on 50 (100 sides) human cadavers, to isolate the nerve and identify its course and branches. 10 dog (Canis lupus familiaris) cadavers were also dissected to isolate the ELN and to obtain specimens for histo-chemical analysis. In dogs the ganglion nodosum of vagus nerve and the Superior Cervical Sympathetic Ganglion (SCSG) were completely or partially fused, and the SCSG gave off 1 or more communicating twigs, that connected to the ganglion nodosum. In human beings the SCSG communicated with the SLN and its branches. In most cases the SCSG connected with the ELN (86 %). Hence, statistically, the ELN is a looped nerve. In both dog and human dissections every one of the ELN/ELN loops without exception gave off a branch to the thyroid gland. The Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) staining showed that the dog ELN contained AChE-positive myelinated, AchE-negative myelinated and AChE-positive unmyelinated nerve fibers indicating the presence of somatic motor fibers, somatic sensory fibers and post-ganglionic sympathetic fibers. This proves that the ELN is a mixed nerve. Thus, damage to the nerve during thyroid surgeries could result in functional impairment to not only voice, but also gland function and sensation in the region. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canis lupus Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies (SJMARS)
institution Open Polar
collection Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies (SJMARS)
op_collection_id ftjsjmars
language English
topic Ganglion nodosum
cervical sympathetic chain
acetylcholinesterase
laryngeal nerve loop
spellingShingle Ganglion nodosum
cervical sympathetic chain
acetylcholinesterase
laryngeal nerve loop
Khan, Aliza Shahid
Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
topic_facet Ganglion nodosum
cervical sympathetic chain
acetylcholinesterase
laryngeal nerve loop
description The external laryngeal nerve (ELN) is a slender branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) which primarily innervates the cricothyroid and inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscles. However, the exact nature of fibers which are contained in this nerve has not been ascertained yet. To this purpose, gross dissection was carried out on 50 (100 sides) human cadavers, to isolate the nerve and identify its course and branches. 10 dog (Canis lupus familiaris) cadavers were also dissected to isolate the ELN and to obtain specimens for histo-chemical analysis. In dogs the ganglion nodosum of vagus nerve and the Superior Cervical Sympathetic Ganglion (SCSG) were completely or partially fused, and the SCSG gave off 1 or more communicating twigs, that connected to the ganglion nodosum. In human beings the SCSG communicated with the SLN and its branches. In most cases the SCSG connected with the ELN (86 %). Hence, statistically, the ELN is a looped nerve. In both dog and human dissections every one of the ELN/ELN loops without exception gave off a branch to the thyroid gland. The Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) staining showed that the dog ELN contained AChE-positive myelinated, AchE-negative myelinated and AChE-positive unmyelinated nerve fibers indicating the presence of somatic motor fibers, somatic sensory fibers and post-ganglionic sympathetic fibers. This proves that the ELN is a mixed nerve. Thus, damage to the nerve during thyroid surgeries could result in functional impairment to not only voice, but also gland function and sensation in the region.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Khan, Aliza Shahid
author_facet Khan, Aliza Shahid
author_sort Khan, Aliza Shahid
title Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
title_short Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
title_full Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
title_fullStr Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
title_full_unstemmed Rats and Pigs' Sympathetic Fiber Origin of the Laryngeal Nerve
title_sort rats and pigs' sympathetic fiber origin of the laryngeal nerve
publisher Stallion Publication
publishDate 2022
url https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies; Vol. 1 No. 4 (2022): August Issue; 1-5
2583-3340
op_relation https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18/17
https://sjmars.com/index.php/sjmars/article/view/18
op_rights Copyright (c) 2022 Stallion Journal for Multidisciplinary Associated Research Studies
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
_version_ 1768385558065709056