■LECTURE OVERVIEW: The Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve (RLN)—a branch of the Vagus Nerve (CN X)—exhibits a long, asymmetrical, and highly vulnerable anatomical course.
â– ASYMMETRICAL NERVE TRAJECTORIES:
1. Origin: arise from CN X in the lower neck.
2. Left-sided RLN Path: loops backward under the arch of the aorta, lateral to the ligamentum arteriosum, before ascending vertically in the groove between the trachea and the esophagus.
3. Right-sided RLN Path: loops backward under the right subclavian artery before ascending in the same tracheoesophageal groove.
4. Laryngeal Entry: Passes beneath the inferior constrictor muscle of the pharynx to enter the larynx.
5. Motor Innervation: Innervates all intrinsic muscles of the larynx (responsible for vocal cord abduction and adduction), EXCEPT for the cricothyroid muscle (supplied by the external branch of the Superior Laryngeal Nerve).
â– EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT:
Acute presentation requires rapid stabilization following standard clinical guidelines. Prioritize securing the airway, maintaining hemodynamic stability, and administering targeted antidotes.
â– CLINICAL REGISTRY INSIGHTS:
Patient registry reviews depict high clinical validity in diverse populations, indicating highly correlated trends of symptom development and treatment responsiveness.
[HY-BOARD-1008]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Due to its course, the left RLN is vulnerable to compression by mediastinal masses (e.g., apical lung cancer, aortal aneurysms, or mitral stenosis). Both nerves are highly vulnerable to accidental transection during thyroidectomies. Unilateral injury presents with hoarseness, whereas bilateral vocal cord paralysis is a respiratory emergency. Do not delay emergency interventions for low-priority diagnostic tests. Assess demographic representation when applying trial results to real-world patients.