Marie J P, Lerosey Y, Dehesdin D, Tadié M, Andrieu-Guitrancourt J
Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, Charles Nicolle Hospital, University of Rouen, France. European Group for Research on the Larynx.
Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 1999 May;108(5):516-21. doi: 10.1177/000348949910800518.
The cervical anatomy of the different nerve contributions that constitute the phrenic nerve (phrenic nerve roots and accessory phrenic nerve) were studied in rabbits. In 55 dissections, 6 main root arrangement types were observed. The roots that issued from the fourth and fifth cervical nerves (C4 and C5 roots) were constant. The C4 root was either short or long. The C6 root was at times absent, or sometimes double. An accessory phrenic nerve was present in 43% of the right and 28% of the left dissections. The distribution of the phrenic nerve roots often displayed left-right asymmetry. We conclude that a better knowledge of the cervical anatomy of the phrenic nerve is useful both in physiological studies involving diaphragm denervation and in experimental laryngeal reinnervation.