Basic Instruments in the Operating Room


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Hey hey hey. It's my first post in the new and improve jalmzanatomy! It's all about the Operating Room. The basic instruments found on the operating room here in the Philippines.

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Basic Instruments in the Operating Room
A. Cutting or Dissecting Instruments
1. Scalpel - A small straight knife with a thin sharp blade used in surgery and dissection.
   a. Handle # 3
   - blade nos. : 10,11,12,15,16 &17
b. Handle # 4
- blade nos. : 20 and above
2. Mayo Scissors

a. Straight Mayo
- Used to cut suture and supplies. Also known as:
Suture scissors.

b. Curved Mayo
- Used to cut heavy tissue (fascia, muscle, uterus, breast).
3. Metzenbaum Scissors
- Used to cut delicate tissue.

B. Clamping Instruments
4. Kelly Forceps
a. Curved Kelly
- used to clamp off vessels or tissues such as aorta or uterus.

b. Straight Kelly
- used to clamp off superficial arteries and vessels on the muscle layers. It is also used in clamping umbilical cord during baby deliveries.
5. Mosquito Forceps
- Mosquito forceps are used for more delicate tissues. They are very fine and straight or curved hemostatic forceps used during the surgery to control the bleeding of finer vessels or compressing a bleeding vessel.
6. Babcock
- These forceps are more delicate than Allis but less directly traumatic. They have broad, flared ends with smooth tips. These forceps are used to atraumatically hold viscera (bladder and bowel).
7. Allis
- These forceps have interdigitating short teeth to grasp and hold tissue or bowel. These forceps are slightly traumatic and hold intestine, fascia and skin.
8. Towel Clamps
- Towel-clamp forceps or simply towel clamps are used to maintain surgical towels and drapes in the correct position during an operation.
9. Foerster Clamp
- A foerster clamp is a surgical clamp with a round eyelet. It is commonly used in body piercing, particularly for tongue piercing.
10. Thumb Forceps
- A forcep operated by compression with thumb and forefinger used to hold skin/tissues.
11. Tissue Forceps
a. Tissue Forceps with Teeth
- They are used to hold skin/dense tissue. They have interdigitating teeth to hold tissue without slipping.
b. Tissue Forceps without Teeth
- They are hinged forceps or locking forceps used for grasping and holding tissue.
12. Russian Forceps
- Tissue handling forceps with broad, spoon-shaped tips, serrated around the edge.
13. Adson Forceps
a. Adson with Teeth
- Standard tissue forceps with the opposing blade surfaces covered with long, needle-like teeth used to grasp delicate tissues without slipping.


b. Adson without Teeth
- These forceps are meant for light, careful handling of tissue.
14. Debakey
- Delicate surgical thumb forceps with longitudinal ribs, designed for delicate, nontraumatic vascular surgery.
15. Mixter Forceps
- Mixter forceps are useful for dissecting around venous structures. They are the threading forceps used for hemostatic purposes.
16. Crile-wood Needle – Holder
- They lock to hold the needle in a manner which allows the operator to maneuver the needle through the various tissues.
C. Retractors
17. Malleable Retractor
- A type of retractor that can be shaped or formed to adjust on changing circumstances.
18. Weitlaner Retractor
- A self-retaining instrument, shaped like a scissors but the blades open when the ratcheted handles are closed. The blades each have four downward-pointing, curved prongs which retain their position in a spread wound.
19. Balfour Retractor
- Three individually operable, outward-looking curved loops mounted on a bar. By inserting the blades into an incision and spreading them all the incision is opened to give maximum access to tissues below. Available in standard and pediatric sizes, the latter being suitable for a ventral approach to the vocal cords of the horse.
20. Deaver Retractors
- A Deaver Retractor is used to retract deep abdominal or chest incisions.
21. Richardson Retractors
- A handheld retractor used to retract deep abdominal incisions.
22. Army Navy Retractor
- A handheld retractor used to retract shallow or superficial incisions.
23. Senn Retractor
- A handheld instrument with a curled, three-pronged claw at one end and a right-angled, single blade at the other. Suitable for short-term displacement of soft tissue.
24. Gelpi Retractor
- A self-retaining with two blades, hinged in the middle, separate as the handles are closed and are held open by a rachet. The blades turn down at right angles at their tips, and are bowed towards each other so that they push the edges of the incision apart and retain themselves in it.
25. Rake Retractor
- A metallic instrument with prongs set transversely for engaging and retracting soft tissues.

E. Miscellaneous Instruments
26. Rib Spreader
- Two broad, curved-outward blades which are mounted on a ratcheted bar. Spreading of the ribs can be achieved by inserting the blades through the thoracotomy incision and spreading them manually.
27. Curette
- A spoon-shaped surgical instrument used for cleaning a diseased surface. (e.g. To biopsy a mass in the nose.)
28. Bone Rongeur
- a multijointed, springloaded, plier-like instrument used to break off pieces of bone.

References:
Nursing Skills Laboratory Manual 2006 Edition (by H.G. Alnas et. al. )



6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Here's some additional OR information for you

Unknown said...

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Anonymous said...

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its better if u add some photos in every instruments :)

thank you soo much

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