RANDAL C. PANIELLO,
MD STEVEN E. WEST, MD
ST LOUIS, MISSOURI
Laryngeal adductory pressure (LAP) is the pressure induced as the vocal
folds squeeze on a balloon while the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLNJ is
stimulated. The LAP has been shown to vary with the frequency of stimulation,
with a characteristic slope. The RLN was divided and reanastomosed 4 different
ways in 12 canine hemilaryngeal preparations; the 4 subgroups represented
a range of expected post-reinnervation synkinesis recovery patterns. The
LAP frequency-response curve was measured before surgery and at monthly
intervals for 6 months after surgery. In the "best-case" group
(RLN adductor and abductor trunks each divided and reanastomosed), the
slope was found to return to normal. The 2 whole RLN division-reanastomosis
groups (precise realignment or 180° rotation) both gave results similar
to those of the "worst-case" group (RLN adductor and abductor
trunks divided and transposed); these 3 subgroups were all significantly
different from baseline. The slope of the LAP frequency-response curve
may be a useful means of indirectly quantifying laryngeal synkinesis. |