| Literature DB >> 35341078 |
Nicolas Galat Ahumada1, Flavio Carneiro Hojaij2, Caroline Cunico3, Hugo Genki Kagawa Akahane3, Cleverson Alex Leitão4, Jorge Eduardo Fouto Matias1.
Abstract
Background: Identifying the inferior laryngeal nerve is one of the main concerns in thyroid surgery. The typical recurrent position occurs due the relative position between the vagus nerve and the larynx during the last 3 branchial arches development. In rare cases, this nerve does not loop under the right subclavian artery or the aortic arch. This abnormality is present in 0.7% of patients and is associated with the presence of anatomical vascular anomalies. The left non-recurrent inferior laryngeal nerve is an even rarer abnormality, with only six cases described in the literature to date. Method: A 46- years old female patient referred to total thyroidectomy for symptomatic multinodular benign goiter.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35341078 PMCID: PMC8942699 DOI: 10.1155/2022/4632501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1CT scan three-dimensional reconstruction. Frontal and posterior views of the cervical region, showing the volumetric increase in the thyroid, pronounced on the left lobe (LL), and evidencing the presence of the aortic arch on the right side (arrow), with left subclavian artery with retroesophageal path (asterisk).
Figure 2Surgical cervical exploration on the left nerve. Laryngeal nerve (arrow) out tracheoesophageal groove (asterisk), its usual anatomical position.
Figure 3Dissection of the path of the left laryngeal nerve (arrow) until its emergence in the vagus nerve, in the dissected carotid sheath (asterisk). The left laryngeal nerve may be seen to follow a perpendicular path towards the thyroid (already resected in the photo above), as opposed to looping under the aortic arch.
Cases reported in the literature describing nonrecurrent inferior laryngeal nerve on the left.
| Author | Year | Associated abnormalities | Cases described |
|---|---|---|---|
| Berlin | 1935 | Right-sided aortic arch | 1 |
| Henry | 1985 |
| 2 |
| Fellmer | 2008 | Right-sided aortic arch | 1 |
| Masuoka | 2016 | Right-sided aortic arch | 1 |
| Hua | 2018 | Right-sided aortic arch | 1 |
| Ahumada | 2021 | Right-sided aortic arch | 1 |
| Total of patients described in the literature | 7 | ||