Posterior cricoarytenoid muscle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Posterior cricoarytenoid | |
|---|---|
| Muscles of larynx. Side view. Right lamina of thyroid cartilage removed. | |
| Latin | musculus cricoarytenoideus posterior |
| Gray's | subject #236 1082 |
| Origin | posterior part of the cricoid |
| Insertion | muscular process of the arytenoid cartilage |
| Artery: | |
| Nerve: | recurrent laryngeal branch of the vagus |
| Action: | abducts and laterally rotates the cartilage, pulling the vocal ligaments away from the midline and forward and so opening the rima glottidis |
| Antagonist: | Lateral cricoarytenoid muscle |
| Dorlands /Elsevier |
m_22/12548696 |
The posterior cricoarytenoid muscles are extremely small, paired muscles that extend from the posterior cricoid cartilage to the arytenoid cartilages in the larynx. By rotating the arytenoid cartilages laterally, these muscles abduct the vocal cords and thereby open the rima glottidis. Their action opposes the lateral cricoarytenoid muscles. The posterior cricoarytenoid muscles receive innervation from the recurrent laryngeal branch of the vagus nerve (CN X).
[edit] Additional images
[edit] External links
- LUC pcay
- Atlas of anatomy at UMich rsa4p2
- posterior+cricoarytenoid+muscle at eMedicine Dictionary
- Norman/Georgetown lesson11 (larynxmuscles)
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