The cough receptors or rapidly adapting irritant receptors are located mainly on the posterior wall of the
trachea,
larynx, and at the
carina of trachea, the point where the trachea branches into the main bronchi. The receptors are less abundant in the distal airways and absent beyond the respiratory
bronchioles. When triggered, impulses travel via the internal laryngeal nerve, a branch of the
superior laryngeal nerve which stems from the
vagus nerve (CN X) to the
medulla of the brain. This is the afferent
neural pathway. Unlike other areas responsible for involuntary actions like swallowing, there is no definitive area that has been identified as the
cough center in the brain. The efferent neural pathway then follows, with relevant signals transmitted back from the cerebral cortex and medulla via the vagus and superior laryngeal nerves to the glottis, external intercostals, diaphragm, and other major inspiratory and expiratory muscles. The mechanism of a cough is as follows: •
Diaphragm (innervated by
phrenic nerve) and external
intercostal muscles (innervated by segmental
intercostal nerves) contract, creating a negative pressure around the lung. • Air rushes into the lungs in order to equalise the pressure. • The
glottis closes (muscles innervated by
recurrent laryngeal nerve) and the vocal cords contract to shut the larynx. • The abdominal muscles contract to accentuate the action of the relaxing diaphragm; simultaneously, the other expiratory muscles contract. These actions increase the pressure of air within the lungs. • The
vocal cords relax and the
glottis opens, releasing air at over 100 mph. • The bronchi and non-cartilaginous portions of the trachea collapse to form slits through which the air is forced, which clears out any irritants attached to the respiratory lining. Stimulation of the auricular branch of the
vagus nerve supplying the ear may also elicit a cough. This ear-cough reflex is also known as Arnold's nerve reflex (ANR), linked to the
auricular branch of vagus nerve. It is an example of vagal hypersensitivity. Weakness of the
respiratory muscles,
tracheostomy, or vocal cord pathology (including paralysis or anesthesia) may prevent effective clearing of the airways. ==Dysfunction==