Anatomy
Physiology
Muscles
Surprise
100

These are the 5 main intrinsic muscles of the larynx

What are the thyroarytenoid, posterior cricoarytenoid, lateral cricoarytenoid, arytenoids (transverse and oblique), cricothyroid

100

What are the three ways we can describe voice production?

Pitch, loudness, and quality

100

How many different types do muscles do we have within the larynx?

5

Posterior and lateral cricoarytenoid

Transverse and oblique arytenoid

Cricothyroid

Thyromuscularis

Thyrovocalis




100

The larynx is superior to the ___ and anterior to the ___

Trachea; esophagus
200

Where are the sites of vocal fold attachment?



Anteriorly to the thyroid cartilage just below the thyroid notch  

Posteriorly to the arytenoid cartilages 



200

List all of the laryngeal control variables

1. laryngeal opposition pressure

2. laryngeal airway resistance

3. glottal size and configuration

4. stiffness

5. effective mass of the VF

200

What is the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic muscles? (what do they do)

Extrinsic Muscles: attach the larynx to surrounding structures and move the larynx as a unit

Intrinsic Muscles: connect various parts of the larynx together and move laryngeal cartilages relative to each other



200

What are the biological functions of the larynx?

1. Protecting mechanism: from ‘stuff' getting in and to expel ‘stuff’ out

2. Thoracic Fixation: for bowel and bladder evacuation, childbirth, and emesis (vomiting) 

300

The two laryngeal joints are and they are responsible for

Cricoarytenoid: permits adduction/abduction of the VF in a rocking and gliding motion

Cricothyroid: permits tensing and relaxing of the VF

300

Explain F0

Fundamental frequency is the cycles per second of our VF

300

1.The laryngeal muscles are categorized on what two categories?

2. The vibratory patterns of the VF are set by which two types of muscles?

1. Categorized by the affect they have on medial compression and longitudinal tension

2. Tensor and relaxer muscles 

300

What happens to the F0 of men and women as we age and what is the cause?

For females their F0 lowers likely due to menopause

For males their F0 increases due to thinning of the VF

400

This structure helps protect the airway during swallowing. it does not move on its own

What is the epiglottis

400

Explain how the myoelastic dynamic theory and the Bernoulli affect relate to the VF

1. Subglottal air pressure builds up below glottis 

2. Cover of the VFs open from bottom to top 

3. Glottis is open

4. Subglottal pressure decreases

5. At maximum displacement, elasticity of VFs and Bernoulli effect adduct the cover of the VFs back together from bottom to top



400

These terms are used  for closure and opening of the vocal cords

adduction and abduction

400

Briefly explain laryngeal descent

The larynx if higher up until ~2 years of age and then it descends rapidly through childhood and adolescence to the 3-6/7th vertebrae

500

What is the skeletal framework of the larynx

hyoid bone

thyroid cartilage 

arytenoid cartilages

corniculate cartilages

cricoid cartliages

500

Explain the three types of vocal attacks, what the laryngeal system is doing during each, and what the VF are doing

Usual: regular speech;  respiratory system starts up at the same time as the laryngeal system (build up Psg and engage larynx)

Hard: yelling; respiratory system starts up after the the laryngeal system  (VF approximation begins before airflow)

Soft: whisper; respiratory system starts up before the laryngeal system (VF approximate after expiratory airflow)

500

Explain what each of the muscles does in relation to the VF

ADDuctors:

 ~lateral cricoarytenoid- rotates arytenoids medially

~oblique arytenoid- pulls the apexes of the arytenoids together

~transverse arytenoid-pulls the arytenoids together

ABductor:

~posterior cricoarytenoid- pulls arytenoids out laterally

Tensors:

~cricothyroid muscles- primary tensor of the VF with two parts; the pars rectus rocks thyroid down toward cricoid (vertical) and the pars oblique slides the thyroid forward (horizontal)

~thyrovocalis: medial muscles of the VF that pulls the thyroid and cricoid cartilages farther apart

Relaxer:

~thyromuscularis- relaxes the VF by pulling the arytenoids towards age thyroid cartilage



500

What does it mean for our cartilages to ossify and what happen when they do?

Our cartilages begin to stiffen and movement becomes more difficult