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Surgical Materials

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Classification by type of points All types of scissors can have blunt or sharp blades (A: Sharp:Sharp, B: Blunt:Blunt). All types can have either straight or curved blades. Mayo and Metzenbaum Mayo scissors (B) are used for cutting heavy fascia and sutures. Metzenbaum scissors (A) are more delicate than Mayo scissors. Metzenbaum scissors are used to cut delicate tissues. Metzenbaum scissors have a longer handle to blade ratio. Forceps: consist of two tines held together at one end with a spring device that holds the tines open. Forceps can be either tissue or dressing forceps. Dressing forceps have smooth or smoothly serrated tips.
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Page 1: Surgical Materials

Classification by type of points

All types of scissors can have blunt or sharp blades (A: Sharp:Sharp, B: Blunt:Blunt).

All types can have either straight or curved blades.

Mayo and Metzenbaum

Mayo scissors (B) are used for cutting heavy fascia and sutures.

Metzenbaum scissors (A) are more delicate than Mayo scissors.

Metzenbaum scissors are used to cut delicate tissues.Metzenbaum scissors have a longer handle to blade

ratio.

Forceps: consist of two tines held together at one end with a spring device that holds the tines open. Forceps can be either tissue or dressing forceps.

Dressing forceps have smooth or smoothly serrated tips.

Page 2: Surgical Materials

Tissue forceps have teeth to grip tissue. Many forceps bear the name of the originator of the design, such as Adson tissue forceps.

Rat Tooth: A Tissue Forceps

Interdigitating teeth hold tissue without slipping.Used to hold skin/dense tissue.

Adson Tissue Forceps

Small serrated teeth on edge of tips.

The Adsons tissue forceps has delicate serrated tips designed for light, careful handling of tissue.

Intestinal Tissue Forceps: Hinged (locking) forceps used for grasping and holding tissue.

Allis: An Intestinal Tissue Forceps

Page 3: Surgical Materials

Interdigitating short teeth to grasp and hold bowel or tissue.

Slightly traumatic, use to hold intestine, fascia and skin.

Babcock: An Intestinal Tissue Forceps

More delicate that Allis, less directly traumatic.

Broad, flared ends with smooth tips.

Used to atraumatically hold viscera (bowel and bladder).

Sponge Forceps

Sponge forceps can be straight or curved.Sponge forceps can have smooth or serrated jaws.Used to atraumatically hold viscera (bowel and bladder).

Hemostatic forceps: Hinged (locking) Forceps. Many hemostatic forceps bear the name of the designer (Kelly, Holstead, Crile). They are used to clamp and hold blood vessels.

Classification by size and shape and size of tips

Page 4: Surgical Materials

Hemostatic forceps and hemostats may be curved or straight.

Kelly Hemostatic Forceps and Mosquito Hemostats

Both are transversely serrated.

Mosquito hemostats (A) are more delicate than Kelly hemostatic forceps (B).

Comparison of Kelly and Mosquito tips

Mosquito hemostats (A) have a smaller, finer tip.

Carmalt

Page 5: Surgical Materials

Heavier than Kelly.

Preferred for clamping of ovarian pedicals during an ovariohysterectomy surgery because the serrations run longitudinally.

Doyen Intestinal Forceps

Doyen intestinal forceps are non-crushing intestinal occluding forceps with longitudinal serrations.

Used to temporarily occlude lumen of bowel.

Payr Pylorus Clamps

Payr pylorus clamp is a crushing intestinal instrument.

Used to occlude the end of bowel to be resected.

Page 6: Surgical Materials

Needle holder: Hinged (locking) instrument used to hold the needle while suturing tissue.

Good quality is ensured with tungsten carbide inserts at the tip of the needle holder.

Mayo-Hegar

Heavy, with mildly tapered jaws.

No cutting blades.

Olsen-Hegar

Includes both needle holding jaw and scissors blades.

The disadvantage to having blades within the needle holder is the suture material may be accidentally cut.

Senn

Page 7: Surgical Materials

Blades at each end.

Blades can be blunt (delicate) or sharp (more traumatic, used for fascia).

Hohman

Levers tissue away from bone during orthopedic procedures.

Weitlaner

Ends can be blunt or sharp.Has rake tips.Ratchet to hold tissue apart.

Page 8: Surgical Materials

Gelpi

Has single point tips.

Ratchet to hold tissue apart.

Handles

Page 9: Surgical Materials

#3 Handle

#4 Handle

Handles and Blades

Blades #10, 11, 12, 15 fit the #3 handle.

Blades #22, #23 fit the #4 handle and are commonly used for large animals.

 

Disposable Scalpel

Towel clamps secure drapes to a patient's skin. They may also be used to hold tissue.

Backhaus Towel Clamp

Locking forceps with curved, pointed tips.

Page 10: Surgical Materials

Scissors and Hemostats:

The thumb and ring finger are inserted into the rings of the scissors while the index and middle finger are used to guide the instrument.

The instrument should remain at the tips of the fingers for maximum control.

This is the wrong way to hold the scissors. The ring finger should be inserted into the ring.

This is also the wrong way to hold the scissors. The tips of the scissors should be pointing upwards.

Page 11: Surgical Materials

Thumb Forceps:Thumb forceps are held like a pencil.

Thumb Forceps are not called 'tweezers'.

Thumb Forceps are not held like a knife.

Page 12: Surgical Materials

Scalpels:The scalpel is held with thumb, middle and ring finger while the index finger is placed on the upper edge to help guide the scalpel.

Long gentle cutting strokes are less traumatic to tissue than short chopping motions.

The scalpel should never be used in a "stabbing" motion.

Page 13: Surgical Materials

Nurses role

The Nurses role during the peri-operative period of surgery depends on their position/department they work in. For this current article we will look at the medical-surgical nurses role in the pre-operative and the post-operative periods.

Pre-Operative Period

The role of the nurse in the pre-operative period is two fold. First, to make sure that the patient has not eaten for the pre-determined amount of time set by the Surgeon. Also, conduct any patient teaching about the surgery, the hold room, the OR itself, and the PACU. Instuct the family about the Surgeons preferences regarding family communication post-op as well. Second, all appropriate paperwork must be complete. This depends on your facility, but this mainly includes operative consent forms and pre-operative assessments and nurses notes. Depending on the time frame, on-call medicines (usually antibiotics) are given or sent with patient. Make sure your patients chart is in order, and that the current medication administration records are in the chart. Also, depending on your facility, make sure an adaquate amount of patient stickers are available for the surgery nurses, as well as any transfer forms that need to be filled out.

Intra-Operative Period

This refers to the period from when the patient enters the anaesthetic rooms in the operating suite, to the moment they are discharged from recovery. In nursing care terms, it therefore covers three different aspects of nursing; anaesthetic nursing, instrument and circulating nursing and recovery nursing. The role of the nurse in theatre tends to be a little different from those of the nurse on a ward. The primary focus of the theatre nurse is that of safety and sterility, and not of education and the patient relationship. The main principle of any operation is speed - the faster open and closed, the less chance of the patient becoming compromised post-surgically; the theatre nurse hastens this process. In addition, each of the three disciplines have their own remits: anaesthetic nurses are concerned with ensuring that drugs are drawn up and administered safely, that checking procedures are followed, that consent has been obtained, that the patient is readied appropriately (in terms of positioning) for their operation and the patient has emotional support; instrument and circulating nurses are concerned with keeping the sterile field sterile, keeping a tally of things that go in, and therefore out, of the body, and with assissting the surgeons as required; recovery nurses are concerned with ensuring that the patient returns to a "normal" post-operative state, that their pain is controlled, that they are not running fevers, and that there are no post-anaesthetic complications.

Post-Operative Period

Surgery is complete, PACU has called you report. Now it is time to get the patients room ready for their arrival. Depending on the surgery, make sure any equipment that is need is redily available to you. This could be graduated cylinders, tape, NG canisters, flushes, saftey pins, fresh linens or gowns, IVF and lines, etc. Once patient is in room and comfortable, explain the pain scale to the patient and make sure you have addressed their pain level before continuing any

Page 14: Surgical Materials

assessment. Once this is done, conduct your initial assessment as well as a wound assessment. Depending on the facility, get your hourly vitals as needed. Review post-op orders with the patient, as pain medicine and diet most likely has changed. Once you get back to the nursing station, make sure all orders are noted and correct. This is the time to make sure you have the orders you need. Most surgeries are very routine, and some doctors get too familiar with writing the post-op orders. Make sure you have all the orders you need, especially if this is a late case. Nothing is worse that the patient spiking a temp at 1 AM and not having a Tylenol Suppository order for an NPO patient. Continue to monitor this patient closely, as even


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