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Recurrent laryngeal nerve

Recurrent laryngeal nerve
A diagram showing the recurrent laryngeal nerve
Course of the left recurrent laryngeal nerve
A diagram showing lymph glands and the recurrent laryngeal nerve
Posterior view of tracheal and bronchial lymph glands, with the left and right recurrent nerves visible on either side.
Details
FromVagus nerve
InnervatesLarynx
posterior cricoarytenoid
lateral cricoarytenoid
arytenoid
thyroarytenoid
aryepiglottis
esophagus
heart
trachea
inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscle
Identifiers
Latinnervus laryngeus recurrens
MeSHD012009
TA98A14.2.01.166
TA26344
FMA6246
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

The recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) is a branch of the vagus nerve (cranial nerve X) that supplies all the intrinsic muscles of the larynx, with the exception of the cricothyroid muscles. There are two recurrent laryngeal nerves, right and left. The right and left nerves are not symmetrical, with the left nerve looping under the aortic arch, and the right nerve looping under the right subclavian artery, then traveling upwards. They both travel alongside the trachea. Additionally, the nerves are among the few nerves that follow a recurrent course, moving in the opposite direction to the nerve they branch from, a fact from which they gain their name.

The recurrent laryngeal nerves supply sensation to the larynx below the vocal cords, give cardiac branches to the deep cardiac plexus, and branch to the trachea, esophagus and the inferior constrictor muscles. The posterior cricoarytenoid muscles, the only muscles that can open the vocal folds, are innervated by this nerve.

The recurrent laryngeal nerves are the nerves of the sixth pharyngeal arch. The existence of the recurrent laryngeal nerve was first documented by the physician Galen.


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