This study aimed to examine the incidence and contribution to the innervation of the larynx from Galen's "Anastomosis" (GA), which is the direct connection between the dorsal branches of the internal laryngeal nerve (ILN) and the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN). Fifty adult laryngeal specimens were micro-dissected. The diameter of the ILN and RLN were measured immediately after each had given off their muscular branches to form GA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuplication of the gallbladder, a rare congenital anomaly, is important in clinical practice as it may cause some clinical, surgical and diagnostic problems. In this report we present a case of duplicated gallbladder diagnosed serendipitously in a 63-year-old male patient who had previously undergone successful laparoscopic cholecystectomy (confirmed histologically) approximately a year before for gallstones. The patient was re-admitted with obstructive jaundice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe larynx and its associated structures derive their chief source of innervation from the superior and recurrent laryngeal nerves. Surgery of the larynx requires a sound knowledge of the normal anatomy as well as variations that may be encountered in this region. We report the presence of rare communications between the right external and internal laryngeal nerves as well as between the right external and inferior laryngeal nerves via a thyroid foramen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Currently, there are no reports in the literature of the parotid fascia suggesting that this structure is crucial to the identification of the facial nerve trunk (FNT). Traditional surgical and anatomical descriptions of this fascia report it as a collection of connective tissue large enough to be described by the unaided eye. This study was performed to investigate the composition and limit of the fascia surrounding the parotid gland.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient with a spontaneously acquired hernia along the inferior lumbar triangle commonly referred to as lumbar triangle of Petit is presented. This was confirmed on CT scan and successfully treated surgically. A review of the literature relevant to this condition is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 23-year-old male patient who had no history of any previous medical illness was noted to have a widened mediastinum on chest X-ray undertaken as part of a routine medical evaluation. A computer tomographic (CT) scan confirmed the widened mediastinum to be due to a double superior vena cava (SVC). No further investigations were undertaken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn recent years the second thoracic ganglion has gained anatomical significance as an important conduit for sympathetic innervation of the upper extremity. Thoracoscopic excision of the second thoracic ganglion is now widely recognized as affording the most effective treatment option for palmar hyperhidrosis. This study recorded the incidence, location and associated additional neural connections of the second thoracic ganglion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this clinico-anatomical study, factors potentially responsible for unsuccessful upper limb sympathectomy (ULS) by the thoracoscopic route were evaluated. This study comprised two subsets: 1) in the clinical subset, 25 patients (n = 50 sides) underwent bilateral second thoracic ganglionectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis, and factors predisposing to unsuccessful ULS were identified; and 2) in the anatomical subset, the neural connections of the first and second intercostal spaces were bilaterally dissected in 22 adult cadavers (22 right, 21 left; n = 43 sides). Alternate neural pathways (ANP) were noted in 9 of 50 sides in the 25 clinical cases (18%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStellate ganglion blockade (SGB) has long been considered pivotal in the diagnosis, determination of prognosis and management of chronic regional pain syndrome (CRPS) by sympathectomy. To date a variety of SGB techniques have been described. An inaccurate SGB may mislead clinicians and deny patients a potentially beneficial procedure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this new era of minimal access surgery, advances in optics and illumination have established thoracoscopic sympathectomy as a pre-eminent procedure, including a safe and efficient technique for upper limb sympathectomy. The success of thoracoscopy will doubtless ensure that a greater number of these procedures will be carried out and will put some of the daunting technical challenges posed by traditional open surgical procedures to rest. The thoracoscopic era affords the surgical anatomist a new challenge: to move the teaching of living anatomy to a higher level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nerve of Kuntz and alternate neural pathways (ANPs) have long been considered crucial for upper limb sympathetic supply. However, at thoracoscopy, these structures are neither consistently identified nor searched for. This is probably reflective of the effectiveness of an isolated second thoracic ganglionectomy for upper limb sympathectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech
December 2001
The technical ease of thoracoscopic sympathectomy has established this as the procedure of choice for upper-limb sympathectomy. Notwithstanding the invariable success of this procedure, those rare instances of unsuccessful sympathectomy are disconcerting to the surgeon. Unsuccessful sympathectomy manifests as persistent or recurrent sympathetic activity after a seemingly successful procedure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn understanding of the origin of the sympathetic innervation of the upper limb is important in surgical sympathectomy procedures. An inconstant intrathoracic ramus which joined the 2nd intercostal nerve to the ventral ramus of the 1st thoracic nerve, proximal to the point where the latter gave a large branch to the brachial plexus, has become known as the 'nerve of Kuntz' (Kuntz, 1927). Subsequently a variety of sympathetic interneuronal connections down to the 5th intercostal space were reported and also described as the nerve of Kuntz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdvances in surgical and uro-radiological techniques dictate a reappraisal and definition of renal arterial variations. This retrospective study aimed at establishing the incidence of additional renal arteries. Two subsets were analysed viz.
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