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Reusable Electro-Surgical Pencil; 100 Autoclaves - Aspen Surgical ESPR2-CE
Disposable Electrosurgical Scratch Pad 40/Bx - Aspen Surgical ESSP-CE
Deluxe Change A Tip; Hi-Lo Temp Cautery Kit - Aspen Surgical DEL2-CE
Cautery Low Temp Fine Tip 10/bx - Aspen Surgical AA00-CE
Dispersive Electrode Cable For Reusable Plate 1250/2100 - Aspen Surgical A1254C-CE
Cautery High Temp Fine Tip (10/bx) - Aspen Surgical AA01-CE
Cautery High Temperature Fine Tip 2" Extended Shaft (10/bx) - Aspen Surgical AA17-CE
Autoclavable 3 Button Pencil - Aspen Surgical A902-CE
Electrosurgical Generator + High Frequency Desiccator - Aspen Surgical A952-CE
LEEP PRECISION Integrated System 120V - Cooper Surgical LP-10-120
LEEP PRECISION Generator, 120V Stand-alone - Cooper Surgical LP-20-120
LEEP PRECISION Smoke Evacuator, 120V, Stand-alone - Cooper Surgical LP-30-120
LEEP PRECISION Cart - Cooper Surgical LP-40-001
LEEP Jackson Retractor Large 10.3cm x 3.8cm - Cooper Surgical F234
LEEP Jackson Retractor Medium 7.5cm x 3.8cm - Cooper Surgical F235
LEEP Cer-View™ Lateral Retractor Medium 5.7cm x 2.2cm - Cooper Surgical F410
LEEP Cer-View Lateral Retractor Large 7cm x 2.2cm - Cooper Surgical F420
LEEP Comfort View Lateral Wall Retractor - Cooper Surgical F317
LEEP Lateral Vaginal Retractor - Cooper Surgical F400
LEEP Straight Hook 250mm - Cooper Surgical F810
LEEP 45° Left Angled Hook 250mm - Cooper Surgical F812
LEEP 45° Right Angled Hook 250mm - Cooper Surgical F813
LEEP Two-Prong Hook 260mm - Cooper Surgical F802
LEEP Three-Prong Hook 260mm - Cooper Surgical F803
Electrosurgery is the application of a high-frequency electric current to biological tissue as a means to cut, coagulate, desiccate, or fulgurate tissue. Its benefits include the ability to make precise cuts with limited blood loss. Electrosurgical devices are frequently used during surgical operations helping to prevent blood loss in hospital operating rooms or in outpatient procedures.
In electrosurgical procedures, the tissue is heated by an electric current. Although electrical devices may be used for the cauterization of tissue in some applications, electrosurgery is usually used to refer to a quite different method than electrocautery. The latter uses heat conduction from a probe heated to a glowing temperature by a direct current (much in the manner of a soldering iron). This may be accomplished by direct current from dry-cells in a penlight-type device. Electrosurgery, by contrast, uses alternating current to directly heat the tissue itself. When this results in destruction of small blood vessels and halting of bleeding, it is technically a process of electrocoagulation, although "electrocautery" is sometimes loosely and nontechnically used to describe it.
Often electrosurgery is mistakenly referred to as diathermy. Unlike Ohmic heating by electric current passing through the conductive tissue in conventional electrosurgery, diathermy means dielectric heating, produced by rotation of molecular dipoles in high frequency alternating electric field. This effect is most widely used in microwave ovens which operate at gigahertz frequencies.
Electrosurgery is commonly used in dermatological, gynecological, cardiac, plastic, ocular, spine, ENT, maxillofacial, orthopedic, urological, neuro- and general surgical procedures as well as certain dental procedures.
Electrosurgery is performed using an electrosurgical generator (also referred to as power supply or waveform generator) and a handpiece including one or several electrodes, sometimes referred to as an RF Knife. The apparatus when used for cutting or coagulation in surgery is still often referred to informally by surgeons as a "Bovie," after the inventor.
***For any Electrosurgical Units, Generators, Instruments and Accessories not found on the website, please call or email!!***
888-228-7564
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