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AN38.1-3 | Larynx — Part 2

Nerve Supply and Blood Supply of the Larynx (AN38.1)

Nerve supply (both from CN X):

NerveOriginSupplies
Superior laryngeal nerve (SLN)CN X at nodose ganglionDivides into:
— External SLNMotor: cricothyroid only
— Internal SLNSensory: larynx above vocal cords (supraglottic); pierces thyrohyoid membrane with superior laryngeal vessels
Recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN)CN X in the thoraxMotor: ALL intrinsic muscles EXCEPT cricothyroid; Sensory: larynx below vocal cords (subglottic)

Course of the RLN:
- Right RLN: loops under the right subclavian artery, ascends in the right tracheo-oesophageal groove
- Left RLN: loops under the arch of the aorta at the ligamentum arteriosum, ascends in the left tracheo-oesophageal groove (longer intrathoracic course)
- Both enter the larynx posterior to the cricothyroid joint (between the inferior horn of the thyroid cartilage and the cricoid)
- The RLN crosses the inferior thyroid artery in the neck — the relationship is variable (RLN anterior, posterior, or between branches of the artery)

Blood supply:
- Superior laryngeal artery: from the superior thyroid artery (ECA); accompanies internal SLN through thyrohyoid membrane
- Inferior laryngeal artery: from the inferior thyroid artery (thyrocervical trunk); accompanies RLN

Lymphatics:
- Supraglottis: rich lymphatics → to deep cervical nodes (Levels II–IV) bilaterally (supraglottic tumours → early bilateral nodal metastasis)
- Glottis (true cords): almost no lymphatics → T1 glottic tumours rarely metastasise (best prognosis in the larynx)
- Subglottis: drains to paratracheal nodes (Level VI)

SELF-CHECK

A. Left recurrent laryngeal nerve (cord adducted = paramedian position)

B. Left external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (cricothyroid paralysis)

C. Left vagus nerve in the carotid sheath

D. Left glossopharyngeal nerve

Reveal Answer

Answer: .

External SLN injury paralyses the cricothyroid → the vocal cord becomes lax, short, and cannot tense for high pitch. The cord may appear on the same level or slightly bowed on laryngoscopy. The voice is breathy and weak at high pitch ('cannot speak above a whisper' or voice fatigue). The cord still adducts (moves medially) because the RLN is intact. This is distinct from RLN injury where the cord is paralysed in paramedian position.

Laryngitis — Anatomical Basis (AN38.2)

Acute laryngitis:
- Inflammation of the laryngeal mucosa; most common cause = viral URTI (parainfluenza, rhinovirus, influenza)
- Hoarseness: mucosal swelling of the vocal cords alters their vibration
- The vocal cord mucosa is stratified squamous (not ciliated columnar) → limited mucociliary clearance; retained secretions worsen swelling
- Treatment: voice rest, steam inhalation, treat underlying cause

Acute epiglottitis:
- Most common cause: Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) in unvaccinated children; Group A Streptococcus in adults
- The epiglottis is elastic fibrocartilage with loose submucosa → oedema develops rapidly → 'cherry-red' swollen epiglottis → obstructs the laryngeal inlet
- Do NOT examine the throat with a spatula in a suspected case (stimulation → complete laryngospasm → death)
- Management: urgent anaesthetic review, IV antibiotics, controlled airway in theatre

Croup (laryngotracheobronchitis):
- Parainfluenza virus infection in children (6 months–3 years)
- Subglottic oedema (below the vocal cords, encircled by the inelastic cricoid ring) → inspiratory stridor + barking cough
- 'Steeple sign' on AP soft tissue neck X-ray: loss of the normal subglottic shoulder → narrow, steepled subglottis
- Treatment: single dose of dexamethasone (reduces mucosal oedema); nebulised adrenaline for severe cases

Chronic laryngitis:
- Causes: tobacco smoke, chronic alcohol, vocal abuse, GERD (laryngopharyngeal reflux), pollution
- Leads to: squamous metaplasia of the laryngeal mucosa → leukoplakia (white patch on vocal cord) → carcinoma in situinvasive SCC
- India: chronic laryngitis is the most common precancerous laryngeal condition; bidi/cigarette smoking + pan masala use are the dominant risk factors

Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injury — Anatomical Basis (AN38.3)

Sites of RLN injury:

LevelCause
Neck (tracheo-oesophageal groove)Thyroid surgery (most common); thyroid cancer invasion; radical neck dissection; carotid endarterectomy
Mediastinum (right subclavian/left aortic arch level)Left: aortic aneurysm, Ortner syndrome (mitral stenosis with large left atrium compressing left RLN), mediastinal lymphoma, lung apex carcinoma; Right: right subclavian artery anomalies
Direct laryngeal traumaIntubation trauma, blunt neck trauma

The inferior thyroid artery-RLN relationship:
- The RLN crosses the inferior thyroid artery in the neck
- The relationship is variable:
- RLN anterior to the artery (~50%)
- RLN posterior to the artery (~30%)
- RLN between branches of the artery (~20%)
- Right non-recurrent laryngeal nerve (0.5–1%): arises directly from the right vagus, courses transversely to the larynx; associated with an aberrant right subclavian artery (arteria lusoria); can be mistakenly ligated as the inferior thyroid artery

Clinical features of RLN injury:

TypeClinical features
Unilateral (complete)Hoarseness; breathy voice; cord in paramedian/cadaveric position; aspiration on liquids; cough
Unilateral (partial, neuropraxia)Transient hoarseness; recovers in weeks-months
Bilateral (complete)Both cords paramedian → severe inspiratory stridor → respiratory failure → emergency tracheostomy
Bilateral (partial, SLN spared)Whispering voice; bilateral bowing; aspiration

Vocal cord positions:
- Median (paramedian): adducted — cadaveric position; RLN + SLN both lost; or complete RLN injury
- Lateral (abducted): open as in quiet breathing
- Paramedian: slight abduction from median; incomplete RLN injury

Ortner's syndrome (cardiovocal syndrome): Left-sided hoarseness due to compression of the left RLN by an enlarged cardiovascular structure — classically a large left atrium from rheumatic mitral stenosis; also aortic aneurysm. Historically important in India where rheumatic heart disease is still prevalent.