NORMAN D. HOGIKYAN, MD; MICHAEL M. JOHNS, MD; PAUL R. KILENY, PHD;
MELANIE URBANCHEK, PHD; WILLIAM M. KUZON, JR, MD, PHD
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN
WILLIAM R. CARROLL, MD
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
There is no current treatment method that can reliably restore
physiologic movement to a paralyzed vocal fold. The purposes of this
study were to test the hypotheses that 1) muscle-nerve-muscle (M-N-M) neurotization
can be induced in feline laryngeal muscles and 2) M-N-M neurotization
can
restore movement to a paralyzed vocal fold. Muscle-nerve-muscle neurotization
can be defined as the reinnervation of a denervated muscle via axons
that are induced to sprout from nerves within an innervated muscle and
that
then traverse a nerve graft interposed between it and the target
denervated muscle. A paralyzed laryngeal muscle could be reinnervated by
axons from
its contralateral paired muscle, thus achieving motion-specific reinnervation.
Eighteen adult cats were divided into sham, hemilaryngeal -denervated,
and M-N-M-reinnervated thyroarytenoid muscle groups. Five of the
6 reinnervated animals had histologic evidence of axons in the nerve graft,
4 of the 6
had evoked electromyographic evidence of crossed reinnervation, and
1 of the 6 had a return of appropriately phased adduction. This technique
has
great potential and should be further investigated.
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