Hs. Choi et al., FUNCTION OF THE POSTERIOR CRICOARYTENOID MUSCLE IN PHONATION - IN-VIVO LARYNGEAL MODEL, Otolaryngology and head and neck surgery, 109(6), 1993, pp. 1043-1051
The function of the posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) muscle in phonation
has not been well documented. To date, several electromyographic stud
ies have suggested that the PCA muscle is not simply an abductor of th
e vocal folds, but also functions in phonation. This study used an in
vivo canine laryngeal model to study the function of the PCA muscle. S
ubglottic pressure and electroglottographic, photoglottographic, and a
coustic waveforms were gathered from five adult mongrel dogs under var
ying conditions of nerve stimulation. Subglottic pressure, fundamental
frequency, sound intensity, and vocal efficiency decreased with incre
asing stimulation of the posterior branch of the recurrent laryngeal n
erve. These results suggest that the PCA muscle not only acts to brace
the larynx against the anterior pull of the adductor and cricothyroid
muscles, but also functions inhibitorily in phonation by controlling
the phonatory glottal width.