DEFINITION.—Neoplastic formations, benign and malign, in the interior of the larynx, in its cartilaginous framework, in its investment-tissues, or upon the exterior of the organ.

ETIOLOGY.—Inflammation of the mucous membrane, local irritation or injury, ulceration, cell-proliferation, and excessive granulation seem to be the exciting causes of benign neoplasms. They follow on laryngitis, whether catarrhal, syphilitic, tuberculous, exanthematic, toxic, or traumatic. They are quite common, so to speak, several thousands of cases being on record, and as many or more probably being unrecorded. Heredity does not seem to play any special part in their production. They are occasionally congenital, and may be developed at any age; but they are encountered the most frequently in subjects between the ages of thirty and sixty years, probably because of the greater exposure to laryngitis attending the activity incidental to the prime of life. Males are affected far more frequently than females, probably on account of greater exposure to sources of laryngitis. Benign growths are sometimes followed by malign growths in recurrence, and are sometimes converted into malignity by irritation, whether physiological, mechanical, or instrumental. Malign growths are attributed to cold, chronic laryngitis, and traumatism as the initial exciting causes. Butlin suggests a cryptogamic origin. They are far more common in males than in females, and occur chiefly between the ages of twenty-five and seventy, but they have been noted as occurring exceptionally much later, and even as early as the first year.

PATHOLOGY AND MORBID ANATOMY.—By far the greater number of laryngeal morbid growths belong histologically to the category of benign neoplasms, but the important location they occupy often renders them clinically malign. By far the greater number of benign growths are papillomas, perhaps fully two-thirds, although Elsberg has reported that but 163 instances were papillomas out of 310 seen in his own practice.7 This has been an exceptional experience. Then we have fibromas, myxomas, adenomas, lymphomas, angeiomas, cystomas, ecchondromas, lipomas, and composite neoplasms. Laryngeal morbid growths, too, occasionally undergo the fatty, colloid, or amyloid degenerations. Papillomas are frequently multiple, and most frequently sessile, but the other benign neoplasms are most frequently single and are more often pedunculated. All this class of morbid growths affect the anterior half of the larynx more than the posterior. They are most frequent on the vocal bands or very near to them, although they may occupy any portion of the larynx. They vary in size from the smallest protuberance to a bulk sufficient to block up the cavity of the larynx and even project above it. The dimensions of the greater number of papillomas vary from the size of a pea to that of a small mulberry. Other benign neoplasms rarely reach the bulk attained by papillomas.

7 Archives of Laryngology, p. 1, New York, 1880.

Malign growths are far less common than benign ones. They comprise both sarcomas and carcinomas. Sarcomas occur in the varieties of spindle-celled, round-celled, giant-celled, mixed-celled, fibrosarcoma, lymphosarcoma, and myxosarcoma. Some attain only the size of small beans, and few exceed the size of a pigeon's egg. The majority of them are primary growths. Most of them originate in the interior of the larynx, whence they may extend by contiguous infiltration, even penetrating the laryngeal walls. The vocal band and the ventricular band are the most frequent seat. The epiglottis is a common seat. These growths appear either in irregular, smooth, spheroid masses, or nodulated, mamillated, and dendritic. They are much the more common in males, and occur chiefly in subjects between the ages of twenty-five and fifty. Their growth is slow for a year or more, and then becomes more rapid.

Carcinoma is much more common than sarcoma. It is most frequently primary, and primarily limited to the larynx, but occurs likewise in extension of carcinoma of the tongue, palate, pharynx, oesophagus, or thyroid gland. It rarely extends to the oesophagus or penetrates the laryngeal walls.

Squamous-celled carcinoma or epithelioma is the commonest variety, large spheroidal-celled or encephaloid being much less frequent, and small spheroidal-celled and cylindrical-celled occurring still more rarely. Intrinsic laryngeal carcinoma is usually unilateral at first, and most frequently in the left side. Its most frequent seat is at the vocal band. It rarely occurs below this point, and when it does, as in the five cases analyzed by Butlin,8 it seems to be at some point just beneath. Extrinsic laryngeal carcinoma usually begins in the epiglottis, and sometimes occupies that structure only. It may begin in a cicatrix in the skin.9 Carcinoma is the more common in males, chiefly in subjects between the ages of fifty and seventy. It has occurred within the first year, at three years, and as late as at eighty-three years. Carcinoma is liable to extend by infiltration of tissue and destroy all the contiguous and overlying tissues, so that it may extend into the pharynx or even externally; the large spheroidal-celled variety presenting the most frequently progressive ulceration into contiguous tissue, and the squamous-celled, intrinsic ulceration. Hemorrhage is frequent. Perichondritis, abscess, necrosis, and fistula take place in old cases.

8 On Malignant Disease of the Larynx, p. 36, London, 1883.

9 Cohen, Transactions American Laryngological Association, p. 113, 1883.

SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—Small growths in localities where they neither provoke cough nor interfere with voice or respiration may run their course for a long time without giving rise to any symptoms at all. Growths of larger size, pedunculated growths, and growths located upon important structures give rise to interference with voice, respiration, or deglutition as may be—to cough, and even to pain. Dysphonia is due to mechanical interference with vibrations of the edges of the vocal bands; aphonia, to mechanical interference with their approximation; diphthonia, to mechanical interference at an acoustic node. These manifestations may be permanent or intermittent. Dysphonia is one of the earliest symptoms of carcinoma, and is usually continuous for a number of months before any other indication. Aphonia in carcinoma is often due to nerve-lesion. Dyspnoea is due to some considerable mechanical occlusion of the respiratory tract, whether by the growth itself or in consequence of oedema or of intercurrent tumefaction. It is inspiratory rather than expiratory, and subject to aggravation at night. As with the dysphonia, it varies with the size, location, and mobility of the growth and the position of the head and neck. It may be intermittent or permanent; be slight or severe; or it may terminate in apnoea by spasm, by mechanical occlusion of the calibre of the larynx, or by impaction of the growth at the chink of the glottis. Marked encroachment on the breathing-space is not accompanied with as marked dyspnoea as in acute processes, the parts seeming to acquire tolerance during the slow growth of neoplasms.