Results 231 to 240 of about 27,803 (292)
Epistaxis kit ‒ a standardized approach to optimize emergency care. [PDF]
Gregorio LL, Kosugi EM.
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A 3-Dimensional-Printed Shoulder Simulator for Rotator Cuff Repair Training. [PDF]
Massey PA +5 more
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Surgical gloves need a better fit: Promoting equity in operating rooms. [PDF]
Majeed H +5 more
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Enhancing hand function in patients with hematologic malignancies: a novel knitted glove approach. [PDF]
Mori H +4 more
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Journal of Perioperative Practice, 2010
Surgeons and obstetricians, over the centuries, were only too aware that accidental open injuries during their work, especially in a septic case, could lead to an infected wound, a fulminating illness and often death. Even before the bacterial nature of infection had been established in the mid 19th century, it was still obvious that this dangerous ...
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Surgeons and obstetricians, over the centuries, were only too aware that accidental open injuries during their work, especially in a septic case, could lead to an infected wound, a fulminating illness and often death. Even before the bacterial nature of infection had been established in the mid 19th century, it was still obvious that this dangerous ...
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Surgical glove starch granuloma
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1981A variety of foreign bodies are capable of eliciting a granulomatous tissue response. Surgical glove lubricant powder is one source of foreign bodies. The consequences of talc and starch contamination of tissues are frequently reported for tissue sites outside the oral region.
D F, Wilson, V, Garach
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Surgical Gloves: Current Problems
World Journal of Surgery, 1999Abstract.One century ago surgical gloves were introduced to practice as part of the new antiseptic technique and originally to protect the hands of the surgeon and his assistants from the harmful dermatologic effects of powerful antiseptics (e.g., carbolic acid) in use at that time.
M O, Osman, S L, Jensen
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Surgical Glove Practice: The Evidence
Journal of Perioperative Practice, 2007Surgical gloves are worn to protect both the patient and the surgical team from transferred infections. Wearing two pairs of gloves, perforation indicator systems, glove liners, knitted gloves and triple gloving are said to offer additional protection.
Judith, Tanner, Hazel, Parkinson
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Surgical gloves and plastic gloves
Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin, 1966Surgical gloves are worn to prevent user and patient infecting each other, to prevent users carrying infection from patient to patient and for aesthetic reasons. Over two million pairs of surgeons’ rubber gloves (and nearly one million pairs of plastic gloves) are used in Britain annually.
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