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Dive into the research topics where Ignacio Hernández-Morato is active.

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Featured researches published by Ignacio Hernández-Morato.


Journal of Anatomy | 2011

The central projections of the laryngeal nerves in the rat.

Arán Pascual-Font; Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Stephen McHanwell; Teresa Vázquez; Eva Maranillo; J. R. Sañudo; Francisco J. Valderrama-Canales

The larynx serves respiratory, protective, and phonatory functions. The motor and sensory innervation to the larynx controlling these functions is provided by the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) and the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN). Classical studies state that the SLN innervates the cricothyroid muscle and provides sensory innervation to the supraglottic cavity, whereas the RLN supplies motor innervation to the remaining intrinsic laryngeal muscles and sensory innervation to the infraglottic cavity, but recent data suggest a more complex anatomical and functional organisation. The current neuroanatomical tracing study was undertaken to provide a comprehensive description of the central brainstem connections of the axons within the SLN and the RLN, including those neurons that innervate the larynx. The study has been carried out in 41 adult male Sprague–Dawley rats. The central projections of the laryngeal nerves were labelled following application of biotinylated dextran amines onto the SLN, the RLN or both. The most remarkable result of the study is that in the rat the RLN does not contain any afferent axons from the larynx, in contrast to the pattern observed in many other species including man. The RLN supplied only special visceromotor innervation to the intrinsic muscles of the larynx from motoneurons in the nucleus ambiguus (Amb). All the afferent axons innervating the larynx are contained within the SLN, and reach the nucleus of the solitary tract. The SLN also contained secretomotor efferents originating from motoneurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, and special visceral efferent fibres from the Amb. In conclusion, the present study shows that in the rat the innervation of the larynx differs in significant ways from that described in other species.


Journal of Anatomy | 2013

Reorganization of laryngeal motoneurons after crush injury in the recurrent laryngeal nerve of the rat

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Francisco J. Valderrama-Canales; Gabriel Berdugo; Gonzalo Arias; Stephen McHanwell; J. R. Sañudo; Teresa Vázquez; Arán Pascual-Font

Motoneurons innervating laryngeal muscles are located in the nucleus ambiguus (Amb), but there is no general agreement on the somatotopic representation and even less is known on how an injury in the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) affects this pattern. This study analyzes the normal somatotopy of those motoneurons and describes its changes over time after a crush injury to the RLN. In the control group (control group 1, n = 9 rats), the posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) and thyroarytenoid (TA) muscles were injected with cholera toxin‐B. In the experimental groups the left RLN of each animal was crushed with a fine tip forceps and, after several survival periods (1, 2, 4, 8, 12 weeks; minimum six rats per time), the PCA and TA muscles were injected as described above. After each surgery, the motility of the vocal folds was evaluated. Additional control experiments were performed; the second control experiment (control group 2, n = 6 rats) was performed labeling the TA and PCA immediately prior to the section of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN), in order to eliminate the possibility of accidental labeling of the cricothyroid (CT) muscle by spread from the injection site. The third control group (control group 3, n = 5 rats) was included to determine if there is some sprouting from the SLN into the territories of the RLN after a crush of this last nerve. One week after the crush injury of the RLN, the PCA and TA muscles were injected immediately before the section of the SLN. The results show that a single population of neurons represents each muscle with the PCA in the most rostral position followed caudalwards by the TA. One week post‐RLN injury, both the somatotopy and the number of labeled motoneurons changed, where the labeled neurons were distributed randomly; in addition, an area of topographical overlap of the two populations was observed and vocal fold mobility was lost. In the rest of the survival periods, the overlapping area is larger, but the movement of the vocal folds tends to recover. After 12 weeks of survival, the disorganization within the Amb is the largest, but the number of motoneurons is similar to control, and all animals recovered the movement of the left vocal fold. Our additional controls indicate that no tracer spread to the CT muscle occurred, and that many of the labeled motoneurons from the PCA after 1 week post‐RLN injury correspond to motoneurons whose axons travel in the SLN. Therefore, it seems that after RLN injury there is a collateral sprouting and collateral innervation. Although the somatotopic organization of the Amb is lost after a crush injury of the RLN and does not recover in the times studied here, the movement of the vocal folds as well as the number of neurons that supply the TA and the PCA muscles recovered within 8 weeks, indicating that the central nervous system of the rat has a great capacity of plasticity.


Laryngoscope | 2014

Differential expression of glial‐derived neurotrophic factor in rat laryngeal muscles during reinnervation

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Tova Fischer Isseroff; S.C. Sharma; Michael J. Pitman

Nonspecific, synkinetic reinnervation is one of the causes of poor functional recovery after a peripheral nerve lesion. Knowledge of the differential expression of neurotrophic factors that subserve axon guidance, as well as neuromuscular junction formation and maintenance in the denervated muscles, may allow appropriate interventions that will improve the functional nonsynkinetic reinnervation.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2013

Somatotopy of the Neurons Innervating the Cricothyroid, Posterior Cricoarytenoid, and Thyroarytenoid Muscles of the Rat's Larynx

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Arán Pascual-Font; Carlos Ramírez; Jorge Matarranz-Echeverría; Stephen McHanwell; Teresa Vázquez; J. R. Sañudo; Francisco J. Valderrama-Canales

Neurons innervating the intrinsic muscles of the larynx are located within the nucleus ambiguus but the precise distribution of the neurons for each muscle is still a matter for debate. The purpose of this study was to finely determine the position and the number of the neurons innervating the intrinsic laryngeal muscles cricothyroid, posterior cricoarytenoid, and thyroarytenoid in the rat. The study was carried out in a total of 28 Sprague Dawley rats. The B subunit of the cholera toxin was employed as a retrograde tracer to determine the locations, within the nucleus ambiguus, of the neurons of these intrinsic laryngeal muscles following intramuscular injection. The labelled neurons were found ipsilaterally in the nucleus ambiguus grouped in discrete populations with reproducible rostrocaudal and dorsoventral locations among the sample of animals. Neurons innervating the cricothyroid muscle were located the most rostral of the three populations, neurons innervating the posterior cricoarytenoid were found more caudal, though there was a region of rostrocaudal overlap between these two populations. The most caudal were the neurons innervating the thyroarytenoid muscle, presenting a variable degree of overlap with the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle. The mean number (±SD) of labelled neurons was found to be 41 ± 9 for the cricothyroid, 39 ± 10 for the posterior cricoarytenoid and 33 ± 12 for the thyroarytenoid. Anat Rec, 296:470–479, 2013.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Somatotopic Changes in the Nucleus Ambiguus After Section and Regeneration of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve of the Rat

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Gabriel Berdugo-Vega; J. R. Sañudo; Stephen McHanwell; Teresa Vázquez; Francisco J. Valderrama-Canales; Arán Pascual-Font

Changes in motoneurons innervating laryngeal muscles after section and regeneration of the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) are far from being understood. Here, we report the somatotopic changes within the nucleus ambiguus (Amb) after the nerve injury and relates it to the resulting laryngeal fold impairment. The left RLN of each animal was transected and the stumps were glued together using surgical fibrin glue. After several survival periods (1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 16 weeks; at least six rats at each time point) the posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) and thyroarytenoid (TA) muscles were injected with fluorescent‐conjugated cholera toxin and the motility of the vocal folds evaluated. After section and subsequent repair of the RLN, no movement of the vocal folds could be detected at any of the survival times studied and the somatotopy and the number of labeled motoneurons changed. From 4 wpi award, the somatotopy was significantly disorganized, with the PCA motoneurons being located rostrally relative to their normal location. A rostrocaudal overlap between the two pools of motoneurons supplying the PCA and TA muscles was observed from 2 wpi onwards. Hardly any labeled neurons were found in the contralateral Amb in any of the experimental groups. An injury of the RLN leads to a reinnervation of the denervated motor endplates of PCA and TA. However, misdirected axons sprout and regrowth from the proximal stump to the larynx. As a result, misplaced innervation of muscles results in a lack of functional recovery of the laryngeal folds movement following a RLN injury. Anat Rec, 297:955–963, 2014.


Laryngoscope | 2016

Blockade of glial-derived neurotrophic factor in laryngeal muscles promotes appropriate reinnervation

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Ishan Tewari; S.C. Sharma; Michael J. Pitman

Synkinetic reinnervation of the laryngeal muscles is one of the causes of the poor functional recovery after a recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) injury. Glial‐derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is elevated in rat laryngeal muscles during RLN reinnervation. The specific aim of this investigation was to evaluate the effect of anti‐GDNF on RLN reinnervation.


Neuroscience | 2016

Changes in neurotrophic factors of adult rat laryngeal muscles during nerve regeneration

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; S.C. Sharma; Michael J. Pitman

Injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) leads to the loss of ipsilateral laryngeal fold movement, with dysphonia, and occasionally dysphagia. Functional movement of the vocal folds is never restored due to misrouting of regenerating axons to agonist and antagonist laryngeal muscles. Changes of neurotrophic factor expression within denervated muscles occur after nerve injury and may influence nerve regeneration, axon guidance and muscle reinnervation. This study investigates the expression of certain neurotrophic factors in the laryngeal muscles during the course of axonal regeneration using RT-PCR. The timing of neurotrophic factor expression was correlated to the reinnervation of the laryngeal muscles by motor axons. Nerve Growth Factor (NGF), Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) and Netrin-1 (NTN-1) increased their expression levels in laryngeal muscles after nerve section and during regeneration of RLN. The upregulation of trophic factors returned to control levels following regeneration of RLN. The expression levels of the neurotrophic factors were correlated with the innervation of regenerating axons into the denervated muscles. The results suggest that certain neurotrophic factor expression is strongly correlated to the reinnervation pattern of the regenerating RLN. These factors may be involved in guidance and neuromuscular junction formation during nerve regeneration. In the future, their manipulation may enhance the selective reinnervation of the larynx.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2013

Morphogenesis of the human laryngeal ventricles

Fermin Viejo; Arán Pascual-Font; Luis Rivas Md; Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Teresa Vázquez; Marc Rodriguez-Niedenführ; Stephen McHanwell; J. R. Sañudo

Two theories explain the origin of human laryngeal ventricles: (1) ventricles derive from the fifth pharyngeal pouches; (2) development independent from the pouches.


Clinical Anatomy | 2011

The clinical interest of the ary-thyro-cricoid fascicle

Eva Maranillo; Marc Rodriguez-Niedenführ; Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Arán Pascual-Font; Emilio Donat; Stephen McHanwell; Teresa Vázquez

The aim of this work was to study the prevalence and form of the ary‐thyro‐cricoid (ATC) muscular fascicle, a variable muscular slip connecting the oblique and/or transverse arytenoid muscles with the thyroarytenoid (TA) and/or lateral cricoarytenoid (LCA) muscles resembling a sphincter encircling the glottis. Thirty larynges obtained from necropsies of individuals with no known laryngeal pathology were dissected. The ATC fascicle was observed in 96.7% of the larynges. It appeared bilaterally in 60% of subjects and unilaterally in 36.7%. The posterior attachment of the muscular slip was observed to be in common with either the transverse arytenoid (34%), or the oblique arytenoid (28%) or both muscles (38%). Its fibers terminated by intermingling with either those of the LCA muscle (10.6%), or the TA muscle (38.3%) or both (51.1%). These variable attachments mean that there are nine possible variants of this muscular fascicle. The ATC fascicle was supplied by branches originating bilaterally from the recurrent laryngeal (RLN) and internal laryngeal nerves. The existence of this ATC fascicle could explain the variable position (intermediate, paramedian or lateral) adopted by the vocal folds after lesion of the RLN. The bilateral disposition and innervation of the fascicle could also complicate the interpretation of electromyographic techniques used for testing laryngeal nerve function. Clin. Anat. 24:706–710, 2011.


Neuroscience Letters | 2017

Influence of Netrin-1 on Reinnervation of Laryngeal Muscles Following Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injury

Ignacio Hernández-Morato; Shira Koss; S.C. Sharma; Michael J. Pitman

Following recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) injury, recovery results in poor functional restitution of the paralyzed vocal fold. Netrin-1 has been found to be upregulated in the rat posterior cricoarytenoid muscle (PCA) during nerve regeneration. We evaluated the effect of ectopic Netrin-1 in the PCA during RLN reinnervation. The right RLN was transected and Netrin-1 was injected into the PCA (2.5, 5, 10, 15, 20μg/ml). At 7 days post injury fluorescent retrograde tracer was injected into the PCA and Thyroarytenoid (TA) muscles. At 9 days tissues were harvested. Immunostaining showed reinnervation patterns in the laryngeal muscles and labelled motoneurons in the nucleus ambiguus. Lower concentrations of Netrin-1 (2.5 and 5μg/ml) showed no significant changes in laryngeal muscles reinnervation. Higher concentrations of Netrin-1 significantly reduced motor end plate innervation. The most effective dose was 10μg/ml showing reduced number of innervated motor endplates in the PCA. The somatotopic organization of the nucleus ambiguus was altered in all concentrations of Netrin-1 injection. These findings indicate that injection of Netrin-1 into the PCA changes the reinnervation pattern of the RLN.

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Dive into the Ignacio Hernández-Morato's collaboration.

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Arán Pascual-Font

Complutense University of Madrid

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Teresa Vázquez

Complutense University of Madrid

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S.C. Sharma

New York Medical College

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J. R. Sañudo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Michael J. Pitman

Columbia University Medical Center

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Eva Maranillo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Marc Rodriguez-Niedenführ

Complutense University of Madrid

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Carlos Ramírez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Fermin Viejo

Complutense University of Madrid

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