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

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Larynx (anterior)

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Larynx (posterior)

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Larynx (posterior)

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Larynx (lateral)

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Larynx (superior)

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Larynx (superior)

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Larynx (sagittal section)

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Larynx (sagittal section)

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Larynx (coronal section)

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Vocal fold

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Vocal fold

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Laryngeal Cartilages

3 single & 3 paired

Single Paired

Epiglottis Arytenoid

Thyroid Corniculate (Santorini)

Cricoid Cuneiform (Wrisberg)

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Cartilages (anterior)

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Laryngeal Cartilages

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Cartilages (posterior)

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Cartilages (posterior)

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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.

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Indirect Laryngoscopy

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Flexible LaryngoscopyLEFT RIGHT

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Laryngeal cavity

1. Laryngeal inlet

2. Laryngeal Vestibule

3. Laryngeal Ventricle

4. Rima glottis

5. Subglottis

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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

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Membranes & Ligaments

• Extrinsic:

connect thyroid cartilage & epiglottis with

hyoid bone; cricoid cartilage with trachea.

• Intrinsic:

connect cartilages of larynx to each other.

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Extrinsic

• Thyrohyoid

membrane

• Hyoepiglottic

ligament

• Cricotracheal

ligament

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Intrinsic

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Intrinsic

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Intrinsic

1. Quadrangular membrane

Ary-epiglottic ligament Vestibular ligament

2. Crico-vocal membrane

Vocal ligament Cricothyroid membrane

3. Thyro-epiglottic ligament

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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

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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

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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

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Intrinsic Muscles

B. Acting on laryngeal inlet

Opener Thyro-epiglottic

Closer Oblique inter-arytenoideus

Ary-epiglottic

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Extrinsic MusclesPrimary Elevators Secondary Elevators

Stylopharyngeus Mylohyoid

Salpingopharyngeus Stylohyoid

Palatopharyngeus Geniohyoid

Thyrohyoid Digastric

Depressors

Sternohyoid Sternothyroid Omohyoid

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Posterior cricoarytenoid

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Lateral cricoarytenoid

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Transverse Inter-arytenoid

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Cricothyroid

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Thyroarytenoid externa + Vocalis

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Oblique Inter-arytenoid

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Spaces of Larynx

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Reinke’s space

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Pre-epiglottic space

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Para-glottic space

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Communications

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Shape of Glottis

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Shape of Glottis

Quiet Respiration Forced Inspiration

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Inspiration

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Shape of Glottis

Normal voice Whisper

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Normal phonation

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Whisper

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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

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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

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Blood Supply

Arterial supply:

• Laryngeal br. of superior & inferior thyroid

Venous drainage:

• Superior thyroid vein internal jugular vein

• Inferior thyroid vein innominate vein

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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

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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

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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

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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

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Voice Production

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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

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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

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Aerodynamic myoelastic theory (opening phase)

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Aerodynamic myoelastic theory (closing phase)

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Stroboscopic examination

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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

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Falsetto voice

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Vocal cord cross-section

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Normal phonation

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Falsetto voice

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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)

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Glottis state in phonation

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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

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Musical notes & octaves

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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)

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Adam Lopez & Tim Storms

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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

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Organs of articulation

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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

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Places of articulation

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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

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Chest fixation

Closure of glottis helps in raising intra-thoracic

& intra-abdominal pressure required for:

• Coughing Vomiting

• Defecation Micturition

• Climbing Weight-lifting

• Labour

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Thank You