Lesson completed.

You got 0 of 20 possible points.
Your score was: 0 %

Question Results

Score 0 of 10

Question:

Recurrent nerve-ENG 1

Response:

The photos show the beginning of the left and right recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN or nervus laryngeus recurrens=NLR) where it branches from the vagus nerve and bends upwards. Damage to the RLN can lead to vocal cord paralysis and hoarseness. Common causes are: 1) surgery in the affected area, especially thyroid surgery and carotid endarterectomy, and 2) compression due to space-consuming processes, such as lung, thyroid or esophageal tumors. Compression by dilation of the left atrium or pulmonary artery in mitral stenosis, heart failure or pulmonary hypertension can also damage the RLN. Around which artery does the left resp. right RLN curve, and which side has the greatest chance of being damaged? Gosh A, Chaudhury S, 2019. Cadaveric Measurements of the LeftRecurrent Laryngeal Nerve, LigamentumArteriosum, Aortic Arch, and PulmonaryArtery in the Thorax with Clinical Implications... Myssiorek D. 2004. Recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis- anatomy and etiology. Otolaryng Clin N. America

AnswersYour AnswerCorrect
Left RLN curves around aorta, right RLN around right subclavian artery. Greatest chance of damage to right RLN .
Left RLN curves around left subclavian artery, right RLN around aorta. Greatest chance of damage to left RLN.
Left RLN curves around left subclavian artery, right RLN around aorta. Greatest chance of damage to right RLN.
Left RLN curves around aorta, right RLN around right subclavian artery. Greatest chance of damage to left RLN .
Score 0 of 10

Question:

Esophagus 3

Response:

After an esophageal resection, beige-white milky fluid comes out of the chest drain. The liquid appears to contain many chylomicrons and lymphocytes. What is likely the cause?

AnswersYour AnswerCorrect
Leakage at the connection between the tubular stomach and the esophageal stump
Damage to the azygos vein and/or the (accessory) hemi-azygos vein
Chylothorax due to damage to the thoracic duct