- 1. Surgical Instrumentation
- 2. IMPORTANT TERMS• Atraumatic • without trauma• Traumatic • Causing Injury by penetration or crushing• Dilation • Enlarging an opening in a progressive manner• Dissection • Process of separating tissues through anatomic planes by using sharp or blunt instrumentation
- 3. IMPORTANT TERMS• Grasping • Holding in a traumatic or atraumatic manner• Retraction • stabilizing a tissue layer in a safe position for exposure of a part• Sharp • Instrument with a cutting edge or pointed tip(s) that is used to cut or dissect tissue
- 4. IMPORTANT TERMS• Trocar • A device used for penetration of tissue layers. It is commonly used for percutaneous endoscopy. It is used as a temporary pathway for gases, other instrumentation, or the removal of an organ or substance.
- 5. CLASSIFICATION OF• Cutting and INSTRUMENTS • Suctioning and Dissecting Aspirating• Grasping and Holding • Dilating and Probing• Clamping and • Measuring Occluding • Accessory• Exposing and Instruments Retracting • Microinstrumentation• Suturing and Stapling• Viewing
- 6. CUTTING ANDDISSECTING•SCALPELS• Insert Blade using a HEAVYHEMOSTAT of KELLY CLAMP•No.•No. 11 Blade•No. 12 Blade•No. 15 Blade•No. 23 Blade•KNIVES•SCISSORS•BONE Cutters and DebulkingTools•Biopsy Forceps and Punches•Curettes•Snares•Blunt Dissectors
- 7. • Scalpels (disposable) Adv. Knives(reusable), Ortho, GS, Amputation• Handle 4 – Blade 20-24 (SIZES)• Blade 20 – Initial for SKIN knife• Blade 10 – most common• Blade 11 – Vascular, To puncture Aorta, To cut blood vessel• Blade 12 – EENT, Tonsilectomy• Blade 15 – Plastic, Pedia• Bone Cutters – to Cut RIBS, THORACOTOMY
- 8. CUTTING ANDDISSECTING•Bone Curette• used by Ortho, NeuroSurgeon forLaminectomy•Maybe straight orangulated(spine surgery)Laminectomy – Laminaremoving ofintervertebral disk, toremove tissues, debris,
- 9. CUTTING ANDDISSECTING•Mayo Scissors•Tough tissues,curve mayo, ob-gyn(to cutligaments)•MetzenbaumScissors•delicate tissues,Plastic surgeon,Intestine, delicatetissue
- 10. CUTTING ANDDISSECTING•Suture Scissors (Blunt /Blunt)•Nursing Scissor – Blunt/Pointed
- 11. GRASPING & HOLDING•Tissue Forceps•Smooth Forceps•Toothed Forceps•Allis Forceps•Babcock Forceps•Stone Forceps•Tenaculums•Bone Holders
- 12. GRASPING & HOLDING•Rat-Toothed Tissue Forceps•General Surgery Skin
- 13. GRASPING & HOLDING•Allis TissueForceps•To grasp OBtissues (atraumatic), AP repair
- 14. GRASPING & HOLDING•Babcock Intestinal Forceps
- 15. GRASPING & HOLDING•Backhaus Towel Clamps•Towel clips on the edges ofdrapes, hide the towel clamps
- 16. CLAMPING & OCCLUDING•Hemostatic Forceps•Hemostats•Crushing Clamps•Noncrushing Vascular ClampsMost commonly used, to clampblood vesselsKocher and Oschner forceps
- 17. CLAMPING & OCCLUDING•Pean Intestinal forceps•Intestinal / serrations is horizontal
- 18. CLAMPING & OCCLUDING•Hemostatic Forceps•Hemostats•Crushing Clamps•Noncrushing Vascular Clamps
- 19. CLAMPING & OCCLUDING•Hemostatic Forceps•Hemostats•Crushing Clamps•Noncrushing Vascular Clamps
- 20. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•BALFOURABDOMINALRETRACTOR •Laparotomy •Retractors assist in the visualization of the operative field while preventing trauma to other tissues
- 21. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•ARMY NAVYFARABEUF Retractor
- 22. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•GELPI PerinealRetractor •Self retraining •Biopsy , Skin
- 23. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•Weitlaner Retractor
- 24. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•Spay Hook•Bone hook, skinhook, to retract skinedges during a wideflap dissection, suchas a face-lift ormastectomy.Some have styles ofhooks that have balltips, which causesless trauma to tissues
- 25. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•Senn Retractors
- 26. EXPOSING & RETRACTING•FinochiettoRetractor•For sternotomy ,
- 27. SUTURING & STAPLING•Needle Holders•Tungsten Carbide Jaws•Crosshatched Serrations•Smooth Jaws•Staplers•Clip Appliers•Terminal End Staplers•Internal Anastomosis Staplers•End-to-End Circular Staplers
- 28. SUTURING & STAPLINGA needle holder should not beplaced on a magnetic pad, becauseit may become magnetized.Tungsten Carbide jaws – eliminatethe twisting and turning of theneedleCrosshatching – provides asmoother surface and preventsdamage to the needleSmooth jaws – used with smallneedles such as those used forplastic surgery
- 29. SUTURING & STAPLING•Terminal End Staplers•Internal Anastomosis Staplers•End-to-End Circular Staplers
- 30. VIEWING•Speculums•Endoscopes•Hollow Endoscopes•permits viewing in a forwarddirection, with a light carriersupplied by a fiberoptic cableprovides illumination•Lensed Endoscopes•have either rigid or flexiblesheaths, used in combination withvideo assisted technology, canrecord action videos and still digitalphotography
- 31. SUCTIONING & ASPIRATING•Suction•Suction devices remove blood andother fluids from a surgical or dentaloperative field.•Used in abdominal laparatomy orwithin a cavity with copiousamounts of fluid. The outer filtershield prevents the adjacent tissuesfrom being suctioned in to theapparatus.•Poole Abdominal Tip•Frazier Tip•Yankeur Tip•Autotransfusion•Aspiration•Trocar•Cannula
- 32. SUCTIONING & ASPIRATING•Suction•Poole Abdominal Tip•Frazier Tip - forbrain, spinal, plastic, ororthopedicprocedures, used whenencountering little or nofluid•Yankeur Tip -Standard tipfor suctioning. Has anangle for mouth andthroat, also useful forvisualization of rupturedaneurysm•Trocar•Cannula
- 33. DILATING & PROBINGProbing instruments areused to enter naturalopenings, such as thecommon bile duct, orfistulasDilating instrumentsexpand the size of anopening, such as theurethra or cervical os
- 34. MEASURING
- 35. ACCESSORYINSTRUMENTS
- 36. MICROINSTRUMENTATION
- 37. Powered SurgicalInstrumentsDRILLBURRBLADEREAMERABRADERAIR-POWEREDELECTRICALLYPOWERED
- 38. HANDLING INSTRUMENTS•Standardized BASIC sets•Scrub Person counts ALLinstruments, sharp andsponges with theCIRCULATOR•Handle LooseInstruments SEPARATELY•Sort by CLASSIFICATION•PROTECT Sharps
- 39. Handling INSTRUMENTS during SURGERY • FREE-HAND TECHNIQUE• Know the NAME and USE• Handle INDIVIDUALLY • Watch the sterile field for LOOSE instruments• Use for the INTENDED purpose • With a MOIST, SPONGE wipe• Use of HAND SIGNALS blood and organic debris from instruments using a• Short INSTRUMENTS = Superficial DEMINERALIZED STERILE, Work DISTILLED H20• LONG Instruments = DEEP• PASS instruments DECISIVELY and FIRMLY
- 40. Handling INSTRUMENTS during SURGERY• Instruments are maintained and sterilized prior to use.• Surgical instruments must be kept clean during a procedure. This is accomplished by carefully wiping them with a moist sponge and rinsing them frequently in sterile water. Periodic cleaning during the procedure prevents blood and other tissues from hardening and becoming trapped on the surface of an instrument.
- 41. ELECTROSURGERY•INITIAL Incision is madeby a SCALPEL•Doubling the currentincreases the heatproduced fourfold•ARGON Enhanced ESUTip is held at 60 degreeangle, causing LESSTissue Damage•BUZZING – the processof coagulating theVESSELS•BUZZ should not exceedmore than 3 SECONDS
- 42. Electrosurgery precautions• ESU should not BE USED in the mouth, trachea, around the HEAD, or in the pleural cavity• ECG electrodes should be placed as far as possible, BURNS can occur• Rings and jewelry should be removed• DON’T USE Flammable agents• DO not immerse an active electrode in liquid• DRY Sponges can IGNITE• Investigate a repeated request for more current
- 43. LASER SURGERY• Light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation (LASER)• Types of LASERS = ARGON, CARBON DIOXIDE, HOLMIUM, KRYPTON, NEODYMIUM, PHOSPHATE, RUBY/XENON
- 44. PATIENT SAFETY in LASERS Eyes and Eyelids Anesthetic Agents should be adequately should be protected (aluminum NONCombustible foil, moist pads) Flexible metallic or Antiseptics must be insulated silicone NONFlammable endotracheal tubes Rectum should be Wear high filtration packed with a MASKS for CO2 laser MOISTENED sponge ablation such as to prevent escape of condylomata (Venereal METHANE gas warts)
- 45. Advantages of LASERS Precise CONTROL = Minimal TRAUMA to ACCURATE incision tissues Access to HARD to DRY, Bloodless REACH areas SURGICAL Field (endoscopes, Minimal THERMAL rhodium reflector effect mirrors) Reduced RISK for Unobstructed view of INFECTION the surgical site Prompt Healing Reduced OPERATING Time
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Use of Medical Instrument
Neurosurgical Instruments
Neurosurgical Instruments
Millennium Surgical can help you compare and reduce cost on neurosurgical instruments, including these popular styles: | |
|
We can reference any catalog number from any company, including these neurosurgical instrument vendors:
Buxton* ❘ Codman* ❘ Stealth* ❘ Link* ❘ TeDan* ❘ Care Fusion* ❘ NSI* ❘ Life Instruments* ❘ Medtronic* ❘ Sofamor Danek* ❘ Boss Instruments* ❘ Spine Surgical Innovation* ❘ Jarit* ❘ Integra* ❘ Redmond* ❘ Ruggles* ❘ Mizuho* ❘ Koros* ❘ Aesculap*
Highest Quality Surgical Instruments
Microsurgery and Neurosurgery, like almost every medical discipline, require standardized instruments. Surgical Instruments and their standardization have been Aesculap's core business for more than 140 years.
The words, "Made by Aesculap" have gained worldwide recognition as a synonym for unrivaled quality and reliability. Each of Aesculap's products is characterized by functionality and continuity. Through innovative new products and continuous development of existing products, Aesculap strives to make neurosurgical interventions safer and more efficient.
Aesculap Neurosurgical Instruments:
Sensation Micro Neurosurgical Instruments
- Angled bayonet shape for enhanced sight lines
- Slender jaws for optimal visibility and access to tight corridors
- Fine jaws for delicate microsurgery
- Color-coded and textured handles for easy identification and ergonomic grip
Back to Top
EC/IC Bypass Instruments
- MIcro scissors, micro forceps and needle holders in short, medium and long working lengths to allow exposure of varying surgical field depths
- Round golf ball handle design provides a secure grip
Back to Top
MIN Instruments
- Over 60 micro instruments designed for minimally invasive procedures
- Fine instrument tips for working in narrow spaces and around sensitive structures
- Golf ball handle design improves grip
- All instruments are Noir™ coated
Back to Top
Krisht Transsphenoidal Neurosurgical Instrument Set
- Comprehensive selection of over 75 instruments
- Designed to meet all clinical needs from basal exposure to tumor resection
- Rotatable ring curettes offer flexibility and reduce the number of required configurations
Back to Top
Krisht Microvascular Neurosurgical Instrument Set
- Comprehensive selection of instruments for delicate microvascular anastomosis procedures
- Wide spectrum of converage - high and low flow bypasses
- Efficient system with color-coded instruments and trays
Back to Top
Al Mefty Skull Base Neurosurgical Instrument Set
- Designed to incorporate ergonomic principles that enhance precision and dexterity
- Shaft is optimized for precision grip and fine movements
- Sharp tips allow for precise dissection, while a blunt outer contour protects surrounding tissues
Back to Top
- Serrated blades prevent the wire from slipping out of the jaws and cut the wire smoothly
- Integrated orange pin provides clear identification of the Aesculap wire cutting scissors
- Microform handles ensure a safe grip with greater balance and a comfortable weight
Back to Top
Bayonet Style Microdisectomy Neurosurgical Instruments
- Bayonet design for improved visualization
- Ergonomic handle for enhanced control
- Multiple tip configurations and geometries
Back to Top
Aesculap Spine Retraction System
- Titanium retractor blades provide radiolucent imaging
- Hinged and rigid frame design
- Multiple blade and hook configurations
Back to Top
Diamond Knives
- Four different cutting geometries: round, retrograde, 45° wedge, and lancet blade
- Clean, precise and force-free incisions
- Color coded titanium handles
Basic surgical instruments
Basic surgical instruments
Many different types of surgical instruments have been developed over time and every type is designed to perform a specific function. Surgical instruments can therefore be categorized based on the function they perform during a surgery. While some instruments function to provide access to the surgeon, others are used to modify body tissues during surgery. A brief introduction to the different classes of surgical instruments is given below:
Clamps
A clamp refers to any surgical instrument that holds or occludes a tissue. E.g. Hemostat is a type of clamp that prevents blood flow through a blood vessel.
Clamps may be further classified into ‘partial occlusion clamps’ or ‘biting clamps’.
Suction Instruments
During a surgical procedure blood, tissue debris and other body fluids may accumulate at the site of surgery. These instruments provide suction to clear the site of surgery for unobstructed view of the surgical field.
Retraction Instruments
Since the body contains multiple layers of tissues, it is essential to hold superficial tissue layers in place when a surgeon attempts to access deeper tissues. Retractors help the surgeons in holding back tissue layers. Retractors may be self-retaining or handheld and their use depends on the type of requirement that arises during a surgery. The length and depth of surgical incision determines the type of retractor that a surgeon requires at a given stage during surgery.
Measuring instruments
A variety of measuring instruments are used during surgical interventions. Instruments that help in measurement include sizers, calipers, depth gauge or simple rulers etc.
Cutting Instruments
These surgical instruments include the blades, scissors, rongeur, shears, curette, osteotome, chisel, gouge, elevator, rasp and saws. Their functions are described below:
Blades are used for sharp cutting that helps in tissue dissection.
Scissors can be used to cut body tissues or to cut other objects (like wire-cutting scissors help in cutting sutures or stainless steel materials).
Rongeurs contain a spring-loaded hinge and during surgery they are used to sever and extract body tissues.
Shears are huge surgical cutting instruments that split/cut bone tissue.
Curette is a small cup-shaped instrument that is used to scoop out tissue.
Osteotome resembles a chisel and is used for cutting bone tissue.
Chisel is an orthopedic cutting instrument, that is used in situations where a straight-sided cut is desired.
Gouge can be considered a V-shaped chisel and it produces small troughs in bone tissue.
An elevator is used to ‘lift’ or ‘separate’ a body tissue.
Rasp: The purpose of using a rasp is to remodel bone tissue.
Saws are used in surgical procedures that need cutting of bones.
Forceps (pickups)
Forceps are non-locking surgical instruments used to manipulate body tissues or for grasping suture needles. Forceps may be ‘smooth’ or ‘toothed’. Toothed forceps contain teeth in the jaws and are described by the number of teeth and their slots on the opposing jaws. E.g. a 2x3 forceps contains 2 teeth and 3 slots.
Dilators & Probing Instruments
A living body consists of multiple tubular structures. These tubular structures may lose their patency due to disease. Probes are therefore used to assess a structure for patency. In other cases, probes may be used to ascertain the type of bone or similar tissue by touching it physically.
The tubular structures may require dilatation during a surgery. Dilators are cylindrical surgical instruments that are utilized to increase the internal diameter of tubular body tissues.
Suturing Instruments
These instruments are used for suturing body tissues. A ‘needle holder’ is a classic example of this class of surgical instruments.
Surgical Stapling & Ligating Devices
Stapling instruments and hemostatic clips fall under this category.
Stapling instruments are capable of applying sutures either by firing individually or in double or multiple lines. The use of surgical stapler reduces trauma to body tissues and the applied sutures are more dependable. A variety of surgical staplers are used for surgical purposes. These include ligating-dividing stapler (LDS), skin stapler, Gastrointestinal anastomosis stapler (GIA), Thoraco-abdominal stapler (TA), end-to-end anastomosis stapler (EEA) and purse-string stapler etc.
Hemostatic clips made of stainless steel, tantalum, titanium or an absorbable polymer are V-shaped staples that function to occlude a blood vessel or duct.