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The arterial anatomy of larynx transplantation: Microsurgical revascularization of the larynx

✍ Scribed by James P. Anthony; Peter Argenta; Philip P. Trabulsy; Richard Y. Lin; Stephen J. Mathes


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
493 KB
Volume
9
Category
Article
ISSN
0897-3806

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


D i z i w t i of t'fmiu

Si{t ywy, I~qwirttiettt of SiitguJ19 [lttti,o of ( d j o i i t i u (if I ~/ ~i i i / i v o 3

S m f ~t ~i ? t / i v o

Advances in immunosuppression and selective reinnervation may soon make laryngeal transplantation a potential therapy for patients undergoing total laryngectomy. Successful transplantation requires a clear delineation of those vessels necessary to completely revascularize the larynx. Our hypothesis is that the arterial inflow provided by a single superior thyroid artery is sufficient to revascularize the entire larynx. To test this hypothesis, 8 cadavers were studied via either barium latex injection (n=4) to assess contralateral tissue perfusion or India ink (n=4), to determine the degree of mucosal perfusion. Following injection via a single superior thyroid artery, all larynges demonstrated either complete, bilateral tissue perfusion evidenced by x-ray visualization of the barium latex injected specimen or bilateral mucosal staining with India ink. We conclude that bilateral perfusion of the entire larynx transplant, including laryngeal and epiglottic mucosa, would occur after revascularization of a single superior thyroid artery. These findings suggest that reliable revascularization of a larynx transplant is technically possible using modern microsurgical techniques.


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