Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here.
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I want to talk to you about the descent of the vagus nerve.
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Now, here's the vagus and glossopharyngeal nerve.
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As we work our way down
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you can see the nerves crossing anterolateral,
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and you're going to follow them into a space right between
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the internal carotid artery and the jugular vein.
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Now, I'm going to go down as far as I can,
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and this is where you're going to find the vagus nerve on
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your way down, traveling between these two structures.
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So sometimes you're going to have to infer its location.
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And this is especially important when you're looking at
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glomus vagale tumors or schwannomas of the vagus nerve.
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Now, I'm going to go as low as I can.
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I've got the internal carotid artery.
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I can't see the external branches all that well,
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and I'm not down to the level of the common
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carotid artery yet, but that's relevant.
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So keep these two structures in mind.
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For the right and left vagus nerves descend from the
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cranial vault through the jugular foramen,
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and they penetrate the carotid sheath between the
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internal and external carotid arteries.
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And then they pass posterolateraly.
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We're not at the level
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of the common carotid artery, but if we were,
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if this were the common carotid artery,
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the perforation is kind of in a posterolateral orientation
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to the common carotid artery into the carotid sheath.
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Now, for those of you that are medical students
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or studying for anatomic exams,
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the cell bodies of the visceral afferent fibers
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of the vagus nerve are located bilaterally,
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bilaterally in the inferior ganglion of the vagus nerve,
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which is known as, board question, the nodose ganglion.
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Now, the right vagus nerve gives rise to the
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right recurrent laryngeal nerve,
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which I'm not going to show now because we're in the brain,
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and it hooks around the right subclavian artery and
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ascends into the neck between the trachea and the
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esophagus, in the right tracheoesophageal groove.
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The right vagus then crosses anterior
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to the right subclavian artery.
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It runs behind the superior vena cava and descends
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posterior to the right mainstem bronchus and then
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contributes to cardiac, pulmonary, and esophageal plexuses.
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It forms the posterior vagal trunk as
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the lower part of the esophagus,
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and then it enters the diaphragm
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through the esophageal hiatus.
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Now, you can stop right now if you want,
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but for you med students and residents out there,
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the left vagus nerve then enters the thorax on the
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opposite side between the left common carotid
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artery and the left subclavian artery,
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and it descends on the aortic arch.
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It gives rise to the left recurrent laryngeal nerve,
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which hooks around the aortic arch to the left of the
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ligamentum arteriosum and ascends between the
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trachea and esophagus in the left TE groove.
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The left vagus further gives off thoracic cardiac
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branches. It breaks into a pulmonary plexus,
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it continues into the esophageal plexus,
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and finally, it enters the abdomen as the anterior
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vagal trunk in the esophageal hiatus of the diaphragm.
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Probably more than you wanted to know,
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but Dr. P out.
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