The researchers also took larynges from macaques and chimpanzees that had died of natural causes or had been euthanized and — in what’s common practice for the field — mounted the parts on ...
But the new study challenges this. Working with animals that would have been euthanized due to terminal disease, the team of researchers removed eight larynges from domestic cats and pumped warm ...
To look into this, Herbst and colleagues removed the larynges, which house the vocal cords, from eight deceased domestic cats. Then they pressed the vocal cords together and pushed warm ...
CT scans were used to help researchers understand and recreate the extra set of vocal folds The study involved taking CT scans of the larynges of different species of lemurs and constructing a ...
Sandage said that some studies have found that some people who have had their larynges removed, and so can no longer trap air in their lungs, have trouble lifting heavy objects. This suggests that ...