4.5 Article

Spontaneous laryngeal reinnervation following chronic recurrent laryngeal nerve injury

Journal

LARYNGOSCOPE
Volume 123, Issue 9, Pages 2216-2227

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lary.24049

Keywords

Laryngeal reinnervation; recurrent laryngeal nerve injury; vocal fold paralysis; superior laryngeal nerve; thyroarytenoid muscle; animal model

Funding

  1. Olympus/American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation Resident Research Grant
  2. University of Michigan Program for Neurology Research and Discovery

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objectives/Hypothesis To enhance understanding of spontaneous laryngeal muscle reinnervation following severe recurrent laryngeal nerve injury by testing the hypotheses that 1) nerve fibers responsible for thyroarytenoid muscle reinnervation can originate from multiple sources and 2) superior laryngeal nerve is a source of reinnervation. Study Design Prospective, controlled, animal model. Methods A combination of retrograde neuronal labeling techniques, immunohistochemistry, electromyography, and sequential observations of vocal fold mobility were employed in rat model of chronic recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. The current study details an initial set of experiments in sham surgical and denervated group animals and a subsequent set of experiments in a denervated group. Results At 3 months after recurrent laryngeal nerve resection, retrograde brainstem neuronal labeling identified cells in the characteristic superior laryngeal nerve cell body location as well as cells in a novel caudal location. Regrowth of neuron fibers across the site of previous recurrent laryngeal nerve resection was seen in 87% of examined animals in the denervated group. Electromyographic data support innervation by both the superior and recurrent laryngeal nerves following chronic recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. Conclusions Following chronic recurrent laryngeal nerve injury in the rat, laryngeal innervation is demonstrated through the superior laryngeal nerve from cells both within and outside of the normal cluster of cells that supply the superior laryngeal nerve. The recurrent laryngeal nerve regenerates across a surgically created gap, but functional significance of regenerated nerve fibers is unclear.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available