The ECC utilizes a long straight curette, a Soft-ECC curette employing fabric to simultaneously collect tissue or a cytobrush ( like a small pipe-cleaner ) to scrape the inside of the cervical canal.
32.
The ECC utilizes a long straight curette, a Soft-ECC curette employing fabric to simultaneously collect tissue or a cytobrush ( like a small pipe-cleaner ) to scrape the inside of the cervical canal.
33.
He said assistants had given him a sterilized metal dessert spoon instead of a curette, a sharp-edged, spoon-shaped tool he should have had to scrape cartilage and damaged bone from the hip socket.
34.
Mini-incisions of 1 mm with a No . 11 surgical blade followed by expression of cyst contents and excochleation of the cyst wall using a 1-mm curette resulted in minimal scarring and a low rate of recurrence.
35.
These instruments include files, curettes, after fives and mini fives used for mechanical debridement . The shank of periodontal instruments can either be rigid, which works better with heavy and tenacious calculus or flexible for fine tuning and light deposit.
36.
A number of softeners are effective; however, if this is not sufficient, A curette method is more likely to be used by otolaryngologists when the ear canal is partially occluded and the material is not adhering to the skin of the ear canal.
37.
The eyelid is injected with a local anesthetic, a clamp is put on the eyelid, then the eyelid is turned over, an incision is made on the inside of the eyelid, and the chalazion is drained and scraped out with a curette.
38.
Forceps, curette, speculum : The use of tools for both obstetrics and abortions is described in unblinking detail in " The Cider House Rules, " the earnest and whimsical stage adaptation, now at the Mark Taper Forum, of John Irving's earnest and whimsical novel from 1985.
39.
Although the hyfrecator is not used primarily to cut tissue, it may be used in a secondary capacity to control bleeding, after tissue is cut by a standard surgical scalpel, or else it may be used to partly destroy superficial tissue, that is then removed by the scraping action of a curette.
40.
In the Antiquity, surgeons and physicians in Greece and Rome developed many ingenious instruments manufactured from bronze, iron and silver, such as scalpels, lancets, curettes, tweezers, speculae, trephines, forceps, probes, dilators, tubes, surgical knifes, etc . They are still very well preserved in several medical museums around the world.