Vol 120, No 3 (2015)
Original Article

3D reconstruction and heat map of porcine recurrent laryngeal nerve anatomy: branching and spatial location

Published 2016-01-15

Keywords

  • Porcine larynx,
  • recurrent laryngeal nerve

How to Cite

Mason, N., Christiansen, M., & Wisco, J. (2016). 3D reconstruction and heat map of porcine recurrent laryngeal nerve anatomy: branching and spatial location. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 120(3), 184–191. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/1335

Abstract

Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy is a common post-operative complication of many head and neck surgeries. Theoretically, the best treatment to restore partial function to a damaged recurrent laryngeal nerve would be reinnervation of the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle via anastomosis of the recurrent laryngeal and phrenic nerves. The pig is an excellent model of human laryngeal anatomy and physiology but a more thorough knowledge of porcine laryngeal anatomy is necessary before the pig can be used to improve existing surgical strategies, and develop new ones. This study first identifies the three most common recurrent laryngeal nerve branching patterns in the pig. Secondly, this study presents three-dimensional renderings of the porcine larynx onto which the recurrent laryngeal nerve patterns are accurately mapped. Lastly, heat maps are presented to display the spatial variability of recurrent laryngeal nerve trunks and primary branches on each side of 15 subjects (28 specimens). We intend for this study to be useful to groups using a porcine model to study posterior cricoarytenoid muscle reinnervation techniques.