A hand-held surgical instrument designed to manipulate, typically by lifting, the bladder during a surgical intervention in the abdominal cavity. It typically consists of a large flat blunt blade (no sharp edges) at the distal end that is set at a right ang...
A hand-held manual surgical instrument designed to manipulate the intestines and organs of the abdomen during a surgical intervention in the abdominal cavity. It typically consists of a large, flat, blunt blade (no sharp edges) at the distal end and a stron...
A hand-held, non-self-retaining surgical instrument intended to be used for retracting a nerve, tendon, or blood vessel to separate it from the surrounding tissue primarily to allow access to other tissues during a surgical intervention. It is a shaft-like ...
A hand-held, manual, tube-like surgical instrument with a right-angled handle designed to apply a rotational force that opposes the directional force of torque when tightening (locking) a screw or screw head setscrew with a screwdriver, inserted down the in...
A hand-held manual surgical instrument designed to manipulate tissue during various types of surgical interventions. It typically consists of a flat blunt blade (no sharp edges) that is double-ended (a blade at either end) and is not constructed for one par...
A hand-held manual surgical instrument intended to be used during interventions in the ear to remove or manipulate tissue or anatomical structures. It is usually made of high-grade stainless steel and has a cylindrical handle located centrally from which a ...
A sterile, steerable flexible tube with a distal snaring mechanism intended to be introduced into the right ventricle of the heart, via transcutaneous peripheral venous access (e.g., femoral vein), to remove an implanted intracardiac pacemaker; it may also ...
A hand-held, shaft-like, manual surgical instrument designed to grasp, guide, or direct suture during surgery on the tonsils. The device tapers toward the distal end to form a right angled single hook or multiple hook; multiple hooks are usually in parallel...