KIMINORI SATO, MD, PHD KURUME, JAPAN Light and electron microscopic investigations of the reticular fibers
(RFs) in the vocal fold mucosa were carried out on excised human adult
larynges. The results are summarized as follows. Reticular fibers were
found in the superficial and intermediate layers of the lamina propria
of the vocal fold mucosa. They were most abundantly discovered around
the vocal fold edge, and they decreased toward the superior and inferior
portions of the vocal folds. The RFs were composed of slender fibrils,
about 40 nm in diameter, and having cross-bands with a periodicity of
about 67 nm. They were found in close association with the basal lamina
of the epithelium and blood vessels. The slender fibrils of the RFs did
not form any bundles, but branched and anastomosed. The RFs formed delicate
3-dimensional networks, and the spaces among the fibers were relatively
large. Glycoprotein and glycosaminoglycan (proteoglycan) were situated
around the RFs and in the spaces among the fibers. Elastic fibers were
located in the spaces among the RFs. The 3-dimensional structure of the
RFs in the vocal fold mucosa, first demonstrated in this study, appears
to be one of the key components of the structural maintenance and viscoelasticity
of the vibrating vocal fold tissue.
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