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Dr.Ramesh Parajuli,MS Chitwan Medical College Teaching Hospital, Chitwan, Nepal

Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

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Page 1: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Dr.Ramesh Parajuli,MS Chitwan Medical College Teaching Hospital, Chitwan,

Nepal

Page 2: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

• Laryngeal cartilages and membranes

• Laryngeal muscles: function

• 3 subdivisions of larynx

• Nerve supply of larynx

• Functions of larynx

Learning objectives

Page 3: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx
Page 4: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Anatomy of larynx

• Rigid skeletoncartilages, muscles, ligaments & membranes

• Extends from hyoid bone above to cricoid cartilage below

• Opposite to C3 to C6 cervical vertebra

• Laryngeal crepitus: absent in post-cricoid carcinoma

Page 5: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Laryngeal cartilages• 3 unpaired and 3 paired

cartilages

• Unpaired: 1. Thyroid2. Cricoid3. Epiglottis

• Paired: 1. Arytenoid 2. Cuneiform ( Wrisberg) 3. Corniculate (Santorini)

Page 6: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Histological types of laryngeal cartilages

(1) Elastic:

Epiglottis, corniculate, cuneiform & apex of arytenoid

Little or no calcification

(2) Hyaline:

Thyroid, cricoid & remaining arytenoid

Calcify as age advances

Ossification begins by 25 yr & is completed by 60 yr

Page 7: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

1. Thyrohyoid membrane:2. Cricothyroid membrane:

cricothyrotomy

• Cricoid cartilage: only rigid & complete ring among the cartilages forming larynx and trachea

Page 8: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Cartilages (anterior)

Page 9: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Cartilages (posterior)

Page 10: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Laryngeal membranes

(I).Extrinsic membranes:1. Thyrohyoid membrane2. Cricothyroid membrane3. Cricotracheal membrane

(II).Intrinsic membranes:1. Cricovocal membrane forms vocal ligament2. Quadrangular membraneforms the vestibular

ligament

Page 11: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Larynx (sagittal section)

Page 12: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Larynx (coronal section)

Page 13: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

NPL(Nasopharyngolaryngoscopy)

Page 14: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Vocal fold

Page 15: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Pediatric Larynx Vs Adult larynx

1. Subglottis is the narrowest part

2. Loose submucosal tissues (swell up

easily)

3. Positioned high (C3-C4)

4. Soft cartilages collapse easily

Page 16: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Subdivisions of larynx

A. Supraglottis: laryngeal

inlet to apex of ventricle

B. Glottis: apex of ventricle

to 1cm below

C. Subglottis: lower glottic

border to lower cricoid

border

Page 17: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Subsites

A. Supraglottis:

1.Epiglottis 2. AE fold 3. FVC 4. Ventricle

B. Glottis:

1.TVC 2. Anterior commissure 3. Posterior

commissure

C. Subglottis

Page 18: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Intrinsic Muscles

A. Acting on vocal cords

Abduction Posterior crico-arytenoid

Adduction Lateral crico-arytenoid

Transverse arytenoid (inter-arytenoid)

Thyro-arytenoid

Tension + lengthening Cricothyroid

Relaxation + shortening Vocalis ( internal part of thyroarytenoid)

Page 19: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

B. Acting on laryngeal inlet

Opener Thyro-epiglottic (part of thyroarytenoid)

Closer Inter-arytenoid (oblique part)

Ary-epiglottic(Posterior oblique part of

interarytenoid)

Page 20: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Extrinsic laryngeal muscles

• Elevators of larynx

Primary elevators secondary elevators

Stylo-pharyngeus Mylohyoid

Salpingo-pharyngeus Stylohyoid

Palato-pharyngeus Geniohyoid

Digastric

• Depressors of larynx (strap muscles of the neck)

Sternohyoid ,Sternothyroid , thyrohyoid ,Omohyoid

Page 21: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Posterior cricoarytenoid

Page 22: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Lateral cricoarytenoid

Page 23: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Transverse Inter-arytenoid

Page 24: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Cricothyroid

Page 25: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Oblique Inter-arytenoid

Page 26: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Mucous Membrane

1.Stratified squamous epithelium

2.Pseudostratified ciliated columnar (respiratory)

epithelium

Page 27: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Nerve Supply

Superior Laryngeal Nerve (SLN):

• Internal: Sensory supply to supraglottis & glottis

• External: Motor supply to cricothyroid muscle

Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve(RLN):

• Sensory supply to subglottis

• Motor supply to all intrinsic muscles except

cricothyroid

Page 28: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Blood Supply

Arterial supply:

• Laryngeal branch of superior & inferior thyroid

artery

Venous drainage:

• Superior thyroid vein internal jugular vein

• Inferior thyroid vein innominate vein

Page 29: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Lymphatic Drainage

Supraglottis: Upper deep cervical nodes

Subglottis: Pretracheal + lower deep cervical nodes

Glottis: has no lymphatics

Page 30: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Functions of Larynx

1.Protection of lower airway: primary function

(i) Closure of larynx: three tier mechanism

(ii) Cough reflex

2.Phonation (voice production): secondary function

3.Respiration

4.Chest fixation by glottic closure: coughing,micturition,defecation

Page 31: Clinical anatomy and physiology of larynx

Thank you