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Original Article

Electron Microscopic Study of Muscle Spindle in Human Interarytenoid Muscle

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Pages 561-567 | Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Using transmission electron microscopy, the fine structure of the muscle spindle in the interarytenoid muscle was studied. The specimen was made from a fresh adult male larynx which had been surgically removed. The muscle spindle showed the following characteristic features: (1) the capsule was thin, with only a small number of layers of capsular sheet cells; (2) the periaxial space was narrow and there were abundant collagenous fibrils; (3) the sensory endings consisted of irregularly coiled terminal axons with varicose swellings, and some endings penetrated the sarcoplasm; (4) one nuclear chain fiber terminated on the capsule, while the other branched into two bundles; and (5) special sarcoplasmic inclusions, possibly related to the sensory endings, were also observed. These findings suggest that the muscle spindle in the interarytenoid muscle is not only a very sensitive stretch receptor, but also a pressure receptor. Key words: human larynx, stretch receptor, transmission electron microscopy.

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