Why does a nerve travel from the brain, down into the chest, and back up again? Would you design it like that?
Hosted by Brendan James Clark and Svet Mangarakov.
A medical history and anatomy podcast exploring the human body, its origins, and the hidden logic behind it.
🎥Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@FascistsandFasciae
📸 Follow us: https://instagram.com/fascistsandfasciae
🔗 Linktree: https://linktr.ee/fascistsandfasciae
In this episode of Fascists and Fasciae: Dissecting Medical History, we explore one of the most peculiar structures in the human body: the recurrent laryngeal nerve. A nerve whose course appears inefficient, indirect, and entirely illogical- until you take a closer look.
We trace its anatomy from the brainstem to the thorax and back to the larynx, where it governs voice, breathing, and the delicate coordination required for speech and protection of the airway. From Galen’s early experiments to modern thyroid surgery, this small structure carries enormous clinical significance.
To understand this nerve’s strange path, we have to take a step back- far beyond modern anatomy and even our own species. At first glance, it seems like a mistake. An unnecessary detour. A structure that defies efficiency. But the body rarely follows the logic we expect of it.
Fascists and Fasciae explores the strange and fascinating history of the human body, where anatomy, medicine, philosophy, religion, politics, and culture intersect. In future episodes, we will dive into topics such as Galenic anatomy and why it dominated medicine for centuries, the spectacle of anatomy theatres, the darkest chapters of medical science, and the curious ways medicine has intersected with art, religion, and politics throughout history.
What appears illogical in the body is often a testament to its long history.
Hopefully this episode tickled your brain.
- Brendan and Svet
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
02:24 Anatomy and functions
09:31 Embryological origins
14:08 Evolutionary and comparative anatomy
25:40 Clinical relevance
31:05 Closing remarks