Motor and sensory fibers of the superior laryngeal nerve in the rat. A light and electron microscopic study.

A quantitative and qualitative study of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) and its branches was performed on the intact nerve and after experimental denervation procedures. The distribution patterns of the myelinated fibers of the intact internal (SLNI) and external (SLNE) branches in the rat were unimodal with a fiber diameter range of 0.5-12 microns and with peaks at 2-4 microns. Numerous unmyelinated fibers, ranging in diameter from 0.1-2.3 microns, were evenly distributed all over the nerve. The SLNI contained no degenerated myelinated fibers after intracranial vagotomy, but about 25% of the unmyelinated fibers showed degenerative features. In the SLNE 2-10% of the myelinated fibers and about 25% of the unmyelinated fibers were degenerated after the same procedure. Extracranial vagotomy caused degeneration of nearly all fibers in the SLNI and SLNE. Single unmyelinated fibers appeared normal after this procedure. Occasional myelinated and a few unmyelinated fibers were degenerated after excision of the superior cervical ganglion. It is inferred from the results that a majority of the myelinated fibers in the SLN (96-99%) are sensory, with the cell bodies in the extracranial vagal ganglia. The SLNE was also found to be predominantly sensory, as only 2-10% of the myelinated fibers and about 25% of the unmyelinated fibers had their cell bodies in the brainstem. Single myelinated and a few unmyelinated fibers in both the SLNI and SLNE had their origin in the superior cervical ganglion.

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