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Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

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Page 1: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Anatomy & Physiology of

LarynxDr. Vishal Sharma

Page 2: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (anterior)

Page 3: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (posterior)

Page 4: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (posterior)

Page 5: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (lateral)

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Larynx (superior)

Page 7: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (superior)

Page 8: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Larynx (sagittal section)

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Larynx (sagittal section)

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Larynx (coronal section)

Page 11: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Vocal fold

Page 12: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Vocal fold

Page 13: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Laryngeal Cartilages

3 single & 3 paired

Single Paired

Epiglottis Arytenoid

Thyroid Corniculate (Santorini)

Cricoid Cuneiform (Wrisberg)

Page 14: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Cartilages (anterior)

Page 15: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Laryngeal Cartilages

Page 16: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Cartilages (posterior)

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Cartilages (posterior)

Page 18: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Cartilage Histology

Elastic: Epiglottis, corniculate, cuneiform &

apex of arytenoid. Little or no calcification.

Hyaline: Thyroid, cricoid & remaining arytenoid.

Calcify as age advances. Ossification begins by

25-30 yr & is completed by 60 yr.

Page 19: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Indirect Laryngoscopy

Page 20: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Flexible LaryngoscopyLEFT RIGHT

Page 21: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Laryngeal cavity

1. Laryngeal inlet

2. Laryngeal Vestibule

3. Laryngeal Ventricle

4. Rima glottis

5. Subglottis

Page 22: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Pediatric Larynx

• Conical in shape & subglottis is narrowest part

• Positioned high (C3-C4)

• Moves higher during swallowing allowing

simultaneous breathing & feeding

• Loose sub-mucosal tissues (swell up easily)

• Soft cartilages that collapse easily

Page 23: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Membranes & Ligaments

• Extrinsic:

connect thyroid cartilage & epiglottis with

hyoid bone; cricoid cartilage with trachea.

• Intrinsic:

connect cartilages of larynx to each other.

Page 24: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Extrinsic

• Thyrohyoid

membrane

• Hyoepiglottic

ligament

• Cricotracheal

ligament

Page 25: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Intrinsic

Page 26: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Intrinsic

Page 27: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Intrinsic

1. Quadrangular membrane

Ary-epiglottic ligament Vestibular ligament

2. Crico-vocal membrane

Vocal ligament Cricothyroid membrane

3. Thyro-epiglottic ligament

Page 28: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Oncological Divisions

A. Supraglottis: laryngeal

inlet to apex of ventricle

B. Glottis: apex of

ventricle to 10 mm below

C. Subglottis: lower glottic

border to lower cricoid

border

Page 29: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Subsites

A. Supraglottis: 1. Epiglottis 2. Aryepiglottic

folds 3. Ventricular bands 4. Laryngeal

Ventricle

B. Glottis: 1. True vocal cords 2. Anterior

commissure 3. Posterior commissure

C. Subglottis

Page 30: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Intrinsic Muscles

A. Acting on vocal cords

Abduction Posterior crico-arytenoideus

Adduction Lateral crico-arytenoideus

Transverse inter-arytenoideus

Thyro-arytenoideus externa

Tension + lengthening Cricothyroid

Relaxation + shortening Vocalis

Page 31: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Intrinsic Muscles

B. Acting on laryngeal inlet

Opener Thyro-epiglottic

Closer Oblique inter-arytenoideus

Ary-epiglottic

Page 32: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Extrinsic MusclesPrimary Elevators Secondary Elevators

Stylopharyngeus Mylohyoid

Salpingopharyngeus Stylohyoid

Palatopharyngeus Geniohyoid

Thyrohyoid Digastric

Depressors

Sternohyoid Sternothyroid Omohyoid

Page 33: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Posterior cricoarytenoid

Page 34: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Lateral cricoarytenoid

Page 35: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Transverse Inter-arytenoid

Page 36: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Cricothyroid

Page 37: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Thyroarytenoid externa + Vocalis

Page 38: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Oblique Inter-arytenoid

Page 39: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma
Page 40: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma
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Spaces of Larynx

Page 42: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Reinke’s space

Page 43: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Pre-epiglottic space

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Para-glottic space

Page 45: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Communications

Page 46: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Shape of Glottis

Page 47: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Shape of Glottis

Quiet Respiration Forced Inspiration

Page 48: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Inspiration

Page 49: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Shape of Glottis

Normal voice Whisper

Page 50: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Normal phonation

Page 51: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Whisper

Page 52: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Mucous Membrane

• Stratified squamous epithelium:

Epiglottis (anterior surface + upper half of

posterior surface), upper part of aryepiglottic

folds & vocal cords

• Pseudo-stratified ciliated columnar

(respiratory) epithelium:

Rest of laryngeal mucous membrane

Page 53: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Nerve Supply

Superior Laryngeal Nerve:

• Internal: sensation to supraglottis & glottis

• External: motor to cricothyroid muscle

Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve:

• sensation to subglottis

• motor to all intrinsic muscles but cricothyroid

Page 54: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Blood Supply

Arterial supply:

• Laryngeal br. of superior & inferior thyroid

Venous drainage:

• Superior thyroid vein internal jugular vein

• Inferior thyroid vein innominate vein

Page 55: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Lymphatic Drainage

Supraglottis: via thyrohyoid membrane into upper

deep cervical nodes & thyroid gland

Subglottis: via cricothyroid membrane into

pretracheal + lower deep cervical nodes

Glottis: has no lymphatics

Page 56: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Functions of Larynx

1. Protection of lower airway

2. Phonation (voice production)

3. Passage of air into lungs for respiration

4. Chest fixation by glottic closure

Page 57: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Protection of lower airway

a. 3-level below-upward closure of:

vocal cords ventricular bands

aryepiglottic folds

b. Cessation of respiration: mediated by

glossopharyngeal nv & deglutition centre.

c. Cough reflex

Page 58: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Voice Production

1. Voice activating air reservoir in lungs:

affects voice intensity

2. Voice generation: affects voice pitch

3. Voice resonation: affects voice quality

4. Voice articulation: affects voice quality

Page 59: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Voice Production

Page 60: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Neuro-chronaxic theory (?)

• Vibration of vocal fold muscles due to impulses

generated from recurrent laryngeal nerves.

Speed is regulated by acoustic center in brain.

• Obsolete theory because:

• muscle contraction not so fast to produce vibrations

• even paralyzed vocal folds can produce phonation

• passive phonation occurs in excised larynges

Page 61: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Combined Aerodynamic & Myoelastic theory

Proposed by Jan Willem van den Berg in 1958

Vocal cords kept approximated Subglottic blast

of air opens vocal cords from below upwards &

causes their passive vibration, producing sound

Muscle tension + Bernoulli's effect closes vocal

cords below upwards Cycle repeated

Page 62: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Aerodynamic myoelastic theory (opening phase)

Page 63: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Aerodynamic myoelastic theory (closing phase)

Page 64: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Stroboscopic examination

Page 65: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Voice generation

High pitch = short, thin, tense, less

elastic vocal cords

Low pitch = long, bulky, relaxed, more

elastic vocal cords

Falsetto voice = tense vocal cords, only edge

of vocal fold vibrates & body is

relaxed,

with small phonatory gap

Page 66: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Falsetto voice

Page 67: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Vocal cord cross-section

Page 68: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Normal phonation

Page 69: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Falsetto voice

Page 70: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Glottis state in phonation

• Voiceless (full air stream)

• Breathy voice (murmur)

• Slack voice

• Modal voice: maximum vibration, sweet spot

• Stiff voice

• Creaky voice (restricted air stream)

• Glottalized (blocked air stream)

Page 71: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Glottis state in phonation

Page 72: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Vocal Registers

• Vocal fry register: lowest vocal register

• Modal voice register: commonly used for speaking

& singing

• Falsetto register: one octave higher than modal

voice register

• Whistle register: highest voice register. Used by

female singers

Page 73: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Musical notes & octaves

Page 74: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Guinness World records

Georgia Brown (2006):

• Highest vocal range from G2 to G10

• Highest vocal note (G10)

Adam Lopez (2002):

• Highest vocal note for male (C8)

Tim Storms (2002):

• lowest vocal note (8 Hz = two octaves below

lowest B on a piano)

Page 75: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma
Page 76: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Adam Lopez & Tim Storms

Page 77: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Voice resonation

• Oral & pharyngeal cavity S

• Nasal cavity M, N, Ng

In rhinolalia clausa:

• M, N & Ng are uttered as B, D & G respectively

In rhinolalia aperta:

• B, D & G are uttered as M, N & Ng

Page 78: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Organs of articulation

Page 79: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Places of articulation

Bilabial: both lips Labio-Dental: lips + teeth

Dental: teeth + tip of tongue

Alveolar: alveolus + tip of tongue

Palatal: hard palate + tongue blade

Retroflex: tongue tip + hard palate

Velar: tongue base + soft palate

Glottal: produced in glottis

Page 80: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Places of articulation

Page 81: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Sound production Bilabial P, B, M, W

Labio-Dental F, V; Dental T, D

Alveolar T, D, N, L, S, Z

Palatal Ch, Chh, J, Jh, Y

Retroflex R, T, Th, D, Dh

Velar K, Kh, G, Gh

Glottal H, ?, uh-oh

Page 82: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Chest fixation

Closure of glottis helps in raising intra-thoracic

& intra-abdominal pressure required for:

• Coughing Vomiting

• Defecation Micturition

• Climbing Weight-lifting

• Labour

Page 83: Anatomy & Physiology of Larynx Dr. Vishal Sharma

Thank You