US3746332A - Support for hand wrist and forearm surgery - Google Patents

Support for hand wrist and forearm surgery Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3746332A
US3746332A US00136764A US3746332DA US3746332A US 3746332 A US3746332 A US 3746332A US 00136764 A US00136764 A US 00136764A US 3746332D A US3746332D A US 3746332DA US 3746332 A US3746332 A US 3746332A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
hand
platform
forearm
support
workbench
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00136764A
Inventor
R Hakstian
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3746332A publication Critical patent/US3746332A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F5/00Orthopaedic methods or devices for non-surgical treatment of bones or joints; Nursing devices; Anti-rape devices
    • A61F5/37Restraining devices for the body or for body parts, e.g. slings; Restraining shirts
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61GTRANSPORT, PERSONAL CONVEYANCES, OR ACCOMMODATION SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PATIENTS OR DISABLED PERSONS; OPERATING TABLES OR CHAIRS; CHAIRS FOR DENTISTRY; FUNERAL DEVICES
    • A61G13/00Operating tables; Auxiliary appliances therefor
    • A61G13/0036Orthopaedic operating tables
    • A61G13/0045Orthopaedic operating tables specially adapted for hand or wrist surgeries
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61GTRANSPORT, PERSONAL CONVEYANCES, OR ACCOMMODATION SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PATIENTS OR DISABLED PERSONS; OPERATING TABLES OR CHAIRS; CHAIRS FOR DENTISTRY; FUNERAL DEVICES
    • A61G13/00Operating tables; Auxiliary appliances therefor
    • A61G13/10Parts, details or accessories
    • A61G13/12Rests specially adapted therefor; Arrangements of patient-supporting surfaces
    • A61G13/1205Rests specially adapted therefor; Arrangements of patient-supporting surfaces for specific parts of the body
    • A61G13/124Hands or wrists

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT A workbench for use in forearm, wrist, hand and finger surgery. It is formed of a ramp for the positioning of a patient's forearm, the ramp merging into a horizontal platform for the placing of the patients wrist and hand. Studs project laterally from the edges of the ramp and the platform to serve for fixing elastic hands used in securing the patients hand and forearm to the bench.
  • the platform has an upwardly open recess into which fits a wooden work plate. This plate serves in the sculpting of bone grafts for use in reconstructive hand surgery.
  • a T-bar support can be attached to the platform in an upright position for the palmdown placement of the fingers to facilitate certain joint surgery procedures.
  • the present invention generally relates to a surgical support and more specifically to a workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery.
  • the workbench of my invention is formed of a ramp defining an inclined plane for the placing of the forearm of a patient and of a horizontal platform defining a flat plane for the laying of the patients hand, the said planes merging one into the other.
  • the hand and forearm may be positioned either with the palm up or down.
  • the workbench of my invention includes anchorage points alongside the ramp and the platform for fixing elastic bands intended to secure the forearm and the hand on the ramp and on the platform. Also, part of the platform is preferably depressed to form a recess which opens into the horizontal plane, a wooden work plate being mounted in the recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand grafts.
  • T-bar type support which is removably fixed to and is upstanding from the platform and which can be used for the support of a patients hand in raised position, this support having an upper horizontal bar over which rests the area of the hand located between the palm and the fingers. The basal finger joints are thereby held in a flexed position.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a surgery workbench made in accordance with my invention, a hand to be operated being shown in dotted lines and with the palm facing upward,
  • FIG. 2 is a further perspective view of the workbench of FIG. 1 showing the hand with the palm facing downward and over the T-bar support, and
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view taken in a plane extending along line 33 of FIG. 2.
  • the surgical workbench of this embodiment of my invention comprises a unitary body I made of autoclavable metal such as stainless steel.
  • the body 1 has upright supporting sidewalls 3, 3', a. front wall 5 and a top wall 7.
  • the latter is formed by a horizontal portion or platform 9 and an inclined portion or ramp llintegrally connected to the platform 9, the planes of the platform'and of the ramp merging into one another.
  • Body 1 can thus be easily transported by hand and placed on any suitable horizontal working surface.
  • a series of headed studs 13 are provided along the upper edge of the sidewalls 3, 3' and the end wall 5. These studs could also be replaced by downwardly oriented hooks or any other type of like securing devices.
  • a T-shaped hand support 19 removably fixed to and upstanding from the platform 9 as by having the lower end of its stem threaded and screwed in to a tapped hole through the said platfonn 9.
  • the ramp or inclined portion 11 of the top wall 7 is preferably concave when viewed in transverse cross-section whereby to more anatomically receive the patients forearm.
  • the hand of the patient is laid flat over the platform 9 with the palm upward and the forearm resting on the ramp 1]; the wrist laying at the junction between the ramp and the platform.
  • Elastic bands 21, preferably rubber bands, are used to secure the member to the bench by twisting or winding them around the laterally projecting headed studs 13 after having been laid over the member.
  • Elastic bands are used to secure both the hand and the forearm and also to distract and position the fingers.
  • the position shown in FIG. 1 is particularly used for surgery of the inner face of the fingers, the palm, the inner face of the wrist and of the forearm.
  • the wrist is also fully exposed and the wrist tendons and carpal bones can thereby be approached readily either in the palm up or palm down position.
  • the angle between the platform and the inclined plane produces an extension of the wrist and thus facilitates exposure to the structures.
  • the wooden plate 17 provided in the forward position of thesupport 19 is used as a cutting surface in the sculpting of bones for grafts, as illustrated in dotted lines in FIG. 3.
  • the wooden plate 17 prevents the scalpel from becoming dulled, as would occur if used against a metal surface.
  • the workbench of my invention useful in reconstructive hand surgery, is a portable support made of high grade stainless steel which has been designed to fit easily into an autoclave for sterilization,
  • Workbench as claimed in claim 1 including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient's hand in raised position, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.
  • said bench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery, said bench comprising a metal body having side and front upright supporting walls, a top wall joining said side and front walls, said top wall having a horizontal portion and having an inclined portion merging into said horizontal portion; said bench further comprising means along said side and end walls adjacent to said top wall for fixing elastic bands intended to secure a patients forearm and hand on said table and to position the fingers and thumb, and wherein said platform is depressed in part to form a recess which opens into the face of said top wall and a wooden work plate is mounted in said recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand bone grafts.
  • Workbench as claimed in claim 4 including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient's hand in raised position with fingers flexed, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.

Abstract

A workbench for use in forearm, wrist, hand and finger surgery. It is formed of a ramp for the positioning of a patient''s forearm, the ramp merging into a horizontal platform for the placing of the patient''s wrist and hand. Studs project laterally from the edges of the ramp and the platform to serve for fixing elastic bands used in securing the patient''s hand and forearm to the bench. The platform has an upwardly open recess into which fits a wooden work plate. This plate serves in the sculpting of bone grafts for use in reconstructive hand surgery. A T-bar support can be attached to the platform in an upright position for the palm-down placement of the fingers to facilitate certain joint surgery procedures.

Description

United States Patent [191 Hakstian July 17,1973
[ SUPPORT FOR HAND, WRIST AND FOREARM SURGERY [76] Inventor: Robert W. Hakstian, 1380 Scarboro Road.Town of Mount Royal, Quebec, (anada [22] Filed: Apr. 23, 1971 [211 Appl. No.: 136,764
Primary Examiner-Robert C. Riordon Assistant Examiner-E. F. Desmond Attorney-Raymond A. Robic [57] ABSTRACT A workbench for use in forearm, wrist, hand and finger surgery. It is formed of a ramp for the positioning of a patient's forearm, the ramp merging into a horizontal platform for the placing of the patients wrist and hand. Studs project laterally from the edges of the ramp and the platform to serve for fixing elastic hands used in securing the patients hand and forearm to the bench. The platform has an upwardly open recess into which fits a wooden work plate. This plate serves in the sculpting of bone grafts for use in reconstructive hand surgery. A T-bar support can be attached to the platform in an upright position for the palmdown placement of the fingers to facilitate certain joint surgery procedures.
5 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures SUPPORT FOR HAND, WRIST AND FOREARM SURGERY The present invention generally relates to a surgical support and more specifically to a workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery.
In the practice of surgery in the forearm, wrist or hand, it was heretofore necessary to resort to the help of one or more surgical assistants simply to hold steady, in desired position, the member to be operated on. A grilled flat table was later developed for hand surgery having, however, only a size sufficient for placing the hand which was then held by means of rubber bands. Although this table represented an improvement over a simple rolled-up towel or gown it has proven inadequate, as such a support is not steady enough nor can this type of table be adapted to the various positions that the forearm wrist and hand must be placed in for operations in these particular areas.
I have devised a versatile surgical workbench that overcomes the aforementioned shortcomings of the previous type of device in that it affords not only secure support for the forearm, wrist and hand, but more important still, it provides for the possibility of placing the member in the many different positions required for modern reconstructive surgical operations of the hand and with the steadiness necessary for proper immobili sation during surgery.
More specifically, the workbench of my invention is formed of a ramp defining an inclined plane for the placing of the forearm of a patient and of a horizontal platform defining a flat plane for the laying of the patients hand, the said planes merging one into the other. The hand and forearm may be positioned either with the palm up or down. The workbench of my invention includes anchorage points alongside the ramp and the platform for fixing elastic bands intended to secure the forearm and the hand on the ramp and on the platform. Also, part of the platform is preferably depressed to form a recess which opens into the horizontal plane, a wooden work plate being mounted in the recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand grafts. I find it also useful to use a T-bar type support which is removably fixed to and is upstanding from the platform and which can be used for the support of a patients hand in raised position, this support having an upper horizontal bar over which rests the area of the hand located between the palm and the fingers. The basal finger joints are thereby held in a flexed position.
A better understanding of the invention will be afforded by the description that follows of apreferred embodiment thereof having reference to the appended drawing therein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a surgery workbench made in accordance with my invention, a hand to be operated being shown in dotted lines and with the palm facing upward,
FIG. 2 is a further perspective view of the workbench of FIG. 1 showing the hand with the palm facing downward and over the T-bar support, and
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view taken in a plane extending along line 33 of FIG. 2.
As shown, the surgical workbench of this embodiment of my invention comprises a unitary body I made of autoclavable metal such as stainless steel. The body 1 has upright supporting sidewalls 3, 3', a. front wall 5 and a top wall 7. The latter is formed by a horizontal portion or platform 9 and an inclined portion or ramp llintegrally connected to the platform 9, the planes of the platform'and of the ramp merging into one another. Body 1 can thus be easily transported by hand and placed on any suitable horizontal working surface.
A series of headed studs 13 are provided along the upper edge of the sidewalls 3, 3' and the end wall 5. These studs could also be replaced by downwardly oriented hooks or any other type of like securing devices.
Part of the platform 9 is depressed to form a recess 15 (FIG. 3) opening into its upper face and a hardwood work plate 17 is inserted into this: recess.
For certain uses, as hereinafter specified, there is provided a T-shaped hand support 19 removably fixed to and upstanding from the platform 9 as by having the lower end of its stem threaded and screwed in to a tapped hole through the said platfonn 9. By providing a tapped hole extending completely through the platform 9, it is then possible to thread the support underneath the platform, in the enclosure formed by walls 3, 3' and 5, whereby to store the support 19 when not in use.
Finally, the ramp or inclined portion 11 of the top wall 7 is preferably concave when viewed in transverse cross-section whereby to more anatomically receive the patients forearm.
In the use of the device shown in FIG. 1, the hand of the patient is laid flat over the platform 9 with the palm upward and the forearm resting on the ramp 1]; the wrist laying at the junction between the ramp and the platform. Elastic bands 21, preferably rubber bands, are used to secure the member to the bench by twisting or winding them around the laterally projecting headed studs 13 after having been laid over the member. Elastic bands are used to secure both the hand and the forearm and also to distract and position the fingers. The position shown in FIG. 1 is particularly used for surgery of the inner face of the fingers, the palm, the inner face of the wrist and of the forearm. Further to providing a steady and natural resting position for the hand and forearm, the wrist isalso fully exposed and the wrist tendons and carpal bones can thereby be approached readily either in the palm up or palm down position. The angle between the platform and the inclined plane produces an extension of the wrist and thus facilitates exposure to the structures.
When surgery is to be done on finger articulations, as in cases of arthritis, or in commissure surgery such as grafts in cases of burns, or in the case of surgery to correct congenital malformation in children, I have found theuse of the T-shaped hand support 19 extremely use ful. As shown, the hand is then in raised position with the fingers flexed at their basal joints and outstretched.
The fingers .are, in this case, secured in that position by conventional finger traps 23 fixed at their free ends to the studs 13.
The wooden plate 17 provided in the forward position of thesupport 19 is used as a cutting surface in the sculpting of bones for grafts, as illustrated in dotted lines in FIG. 3. The wooden plate 17 prevents the scalpel from becoming dulled, as would occur if used against a metal surface. As will be gathered from the .above description, the workbench of my invention, useful in reconstructive hand surgery, is a portable support made of high grade stainless steel which has been designed to fit easily into an autoclave for sterilization,
particularly the flash" type of autoclave as used in operating rooms.
I have thus provided a very convenient workbench useful in the practice of hand surgery to correct maiming resulting from accidents, surgery in the case of hand injuries and burns, diseases, tumours, arthritis, contractures and congenital malformations. While modern reconstructive hand surgery dates from the second world war its scope is constantly being enlarged as improvements are made in techniques and instrumentation. Many advances have been made on equipment recently but there still remain several neglected areas. A versatile, steady support for the fingers, hand, wrist and forearm has heretofore been lacking from the reconstructive surgeons armamentarium.
I claim:
1. Workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery, said bench being formed of a ramp defining an inclined plane for the placing of the forearm of a patient and of a horizontal platform defining a flat plane for the positioning of the patient's hand, the said planes merging one into the other at the point where the wrist is intended to lie, said workbench including means alongside said ramp and platform for fixing bands intended to secure said forearm and hand on said ramp and platform and to position the fingers and thumb, and wherein said platform is partially depressed to form a recess which opens into said horizontal plane and a wooden work plate is mounted in said recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand grafts.
2. Workbench as claimed in claim 1, including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient's hand in raised position, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.
3. Workbench as claimed in claim 2, wherein said ramp is concave in transverse direction.
4. Workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery, said bench comprising a metal body having side and front upright supporting walls, a top wall joining said side and front walls, said top wall having a horizontal portion and having an inclined portion merging into said horizontal portion; said bench further comprising means along said side and end walls adjacent to said top wall for fixing elastic bands intended to secure a patients forearm and hand on said table and to position the fingers and thumb, and wherein said platform is depressed in part to form a recess which opens into the face of said top wall and a wooden work plate is mounted in said recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand bone grafts.
5. Workbench as claimed in claim 4, including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient's hand in raised position with fingers flexed, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.

Claims (5)

1. Workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery, said bench being formed of a ramp defining an inclined plane for the placing of the forearm of a patient and of a horizontal platform defining a flat plane for the positioning of the patient''s hand, the said planes merging one into the other at the point where the wrist is intended to lie, said workbench including means alongside said ramp and platform for fixing bands intended to secure said forearm and hand on said ramp and platform and to position the fingers and thumb, and wherein said platform is partially depressed to form a recess which opens into said horizontal plane and a wooden work plate is mounted in said recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand grafts.
2. Workbench as claimed in claim 1, including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient''s hand in raised position, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.
3. Workbench as claimed in claim 2, wherein said ramp is concave in transverse direction.
4. Workbench for use in forearm, wrist and hand surgery, said bench comprising a metal body having side and front upright supporting walls, a top wall joining said side and front walls, said top wall having a horizontal portion and having an inclined portion merging into said horizontal portion; said bench further comprising means along said side and end walls adjacent to said top wall for fixing elastic bands intended to secure a patient''s forearm and hand on said table and to position the fingers and thumb, and wherein said platform is depressed in part to form a recess which opens into the face of said top wall and a wooden work plate is mounted in said recess for use in the sculpting of bones for hand bone grafts.
5. Workbench as claimed in claim 4, including a hand support removably fixed to and upstanding from said platform for the support of a patient''s hand in raised position with fingers flexed, said support having an upper horizontal bar over which the area of the hand between the palm and fingers thereof rests.
US00136764A 1971-04-23 1971-04-23 Support for hand wrist and forearm surgery Expired - Lifetime US3746332A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13676471A 1971-04-23 1971-04-23

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3746332A true US3746332A (en) 1973-07-17

Family

ID=22474259

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00136764A Expired - Lifetime US3746332A (en) 1971-04-23 1971-04-23 Support for hand wrist and forearm surgery

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3746332A (en)

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4265232A (en) * 1979-07-02 1981-05-05 Timothy Stonich Inclined arm support for stroke victims
FR2494990A1 (en) * 1980-11-28 1982-06-04 Metripond Merleggyar HAND OPERATING TABLE
US4564180A (en) * 1983-11-15 1986-01-14 John M. Agee Hand holding apparatus for hand surgery
WO1986001711A1 (en) * 1984-09-17 1986-03-27 Australian Biomedical Corporation Limited Hand surgery table
US4779858A (en) * 1985-09-26 1988-10-25 Gerinnove Immobilizing apparatus for performing medical and paramedical procedures
US5060638A (en) * 1989-12-14 1991-10-29 Capra Resources, Inc. Orthotic and restraining device positionable on the hand and forearm
WO1992000713A1 (en) * 1990-07-11 1992-01-23 David Whitman Vickers Surgical hand restrainer
FR2672795A1 (en) * 1991-02-19 1992-08-21 Lacaffiniere Jy De Tiltable temporary fixing device for surgery of the hand and fingers
AU629471B2 (en) * 1990-07-11 1992-10-01 David Whitman Vickers Surgical hand restrainer
US5329941A (en) * 1989-12-14 1994-07-19 Bodine Jr Robert C Orthotic hand and forearm support device
EP0638305A1 (en) * 1993-08-04 1995-02-15 BERGER, J., Lee Surgical hand support apparatus
US5485856A (en) * 1994-04-22 1996-01-23 Buckland; Peter E. Hand immobilizing and positioning apparatus for x-ray examinations
US5547463A (en) * 1994-10-07 1996-08-20 United States Surgical Corporation Surgical hand support apparatus
FR2753085A1 (en) * 1996-09-06 1998-03-13 Prothese Dentaire Chibrac Lab Limb support for surgical table
US20040039413A1 (en) * 2002-08-21 2004-02-26 Radi Medical Systems Ab Radial artery compression system
US20100071705A1 (en) * 2008-09-12 2010-03-25 Todd Alexander Alviso Arch support for the human hand
US20140290666A1 (en) * 2009-03-25 2014-10-02 John M. Agee, Trustee Of The John M. Agee Trust Of August 15, 1996 Treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome by injection of the flexor retinaculum
US9211099B2 (en) 2013-02-07 2015-12-15 G2 Medical, Llc Radial access methods and apparatus
US10226551B2 (en) * 2014-11-25 2019-03-12 Cassemco, Inc. Apparatus and methods for foam positioner manufacture

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4265232A (en) * 1979-07-02 1981-05-05 Timothy Stonich Inclined arm support for stroke victims
FR2494990A1 (en) * 1980-11-28 1982-06-04 Metripond Merleggyar HAND OPERATING TABLE
US4858903A (en) * 1980-11-28 1989-08-22 Metripond Merleggyar Hand surgery operating table
US4564180A (en) * 1983-11-15 1986-01-14 John M. Agee Hand holding apparatus for hand surgery
WO1986001711A1 (en) * 1984-09-17 1986-03-27 Australian Biomedical Corporation Limited Hand surgery table
AU570133B2 (en) * 1984-09-17 1988-03-03 Australian Biomedical Corporation Limited Hand surgery table
US4807864A (en) * 1984-09-17 1989-02-28 Australian Biomedical Corporation Limited Hand surgery table
US4779858A (en) * 1985-09-26 1988-10-25 Gerinnove Immobilizing apparatus for performing medical and paramedical procedures
US5060638A (en) * 1989-12-14 1991-10-29 Capra Resources, Inc. Orthotic and restraining device positionable on the hand and forearm
US5329941A (en) * 1989-12-14 1994-07-19 Bodine Jr Robert C Orthotic hand and forearm support device
AU629471B2 (en) * 1990-07-11 1992-10-01 David Whitman Vickers Surgical hand restrainer
WO1992000713A1 (en) * 1990-07-11 1992-01-23 David Whitman Vickers Surgical hand restrainer
US5140998A (en) * 1990-07-11 1992-08-25 Vickers David W Surgical hand restrainer
FR2672795A1 (en) * 1991-02-19 1992-08-21 Lacaffiniere Jy De Tiltable temporary fixing device for surgery of the hand and fingers
US5881730A (en) * 1992-09-16 1999-03-16 Burger; J. Lee Surgical hand support apparatus
EP0638305A1 (en) * 1993-08-04 1995-02-15 BERGER, J., Lee Surgical hand support apparatus
US5485856A (en) * 1994-04-22 1996-01-23 Buckland; Peter E. Hand immobilizing and positioning apparatus for x-ray examinations
US5547463A (en) * 1994-10-07 1996-08-20 United States Surgical Corporation Surgical hand support apparatus
US5813977A (en) * 1994-10-07 1998-09-29 United States Surgical Corporation Surgical hand support apparatus
FR2753085A1 (en) * 1996-09-06 1998-03-13 Prothese Dentaire Chibrac Lab Limb support for surgical table
US20040039413A1 (en) * 2002-08-21 2004-02-26 Radi Medical Systems Ab Radial artery compression system
US20100071705A1 (en) * 2008-09-12 2010-03-25 Todd Alexander Alviso Arch support for the human hand
US20140290666A1 (en) * 2009-03-25 2014-10-02 John M. Agee, Trustee Of The John M. Agee Trust Of August 15, 1996 Treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome by injection of the flexor retinaculum
US9901688B2 (en) * 2009-03-25 2018-02-27 John M. Agee, Trustee Of The John M. Agee Trust Of August 15, 1996 Treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome by injection of the flexor retinaculum
US9211099B2 (en) 2013-02-07 2015-12-15 G2 Medical, Llc Radial access methods and apparatus
US10226551B2 (en) * 2014-11-25 2019-03-12 Cassemco, Inc. Apparatus and methods for foam positioner manufacture

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3746332A (en) Support for hand wrist and forearm surgery
US3776387A (en) Portable stand with magnetic bar surgical instrument holder for use on an operating cart or table
US3347544A (en) Headrest for eye surgery
US3774773A (en) Magnetic medical tool holder stand
DE60328606D1 (en) DEVICE FOR HIGH PULLING PATIENTS IN A BED
ES2141864T3 (en) DEVICE FOR POSITIONING AND MARKING A PATIENT IN DIAGNOSTIC EQUIPMENT BEFORE AND AFTER RADIOSCOPY IN A COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPH.
BR9815333A (en) Processes for locating a dental implant in a patient's maxilla and for fabricating a surgical template for use in locating a dental implant in a patient's jaw, and positionable surgical template in a patient's mouth
BR102012031185A2 (en) PROTECTIVE DEVICE AND GUIDE FOR BONE TISSUE CUTTING
JPS5944249A (en) Surgical operation tool
ES2122959T3 (en) EXTENSIBLE VERTICAL PROSTHETIC RIB.
NL8105380A (en) OPERATING TABLE FOR HAND SURGERY.
Tharanon Comparison between the rigidity of bicortical screws and a miniplate for fixation of a mandibular setback after a simulated bilateral sagittal split osteotomy
US4180254A (en) Surgical apparatus
US6945252B2 (en) Surgical hand support
AR033840A1 (en) AN ORTHOPEDIC DEVICE TO MODIFY THE DISTANCE BETWEEN THE MAXILAR AND THE CIGOMA OF A PATIENT
US3972332A (en) Surgical shield
CN211560397U (en) Orthopedics drilling sight
EP1112035A4 (en) Surgical instrument holder
CN207101256U (en) A kind of oral care support lighting device
ATE128022T1 (en) CLAP FIXATION SYSTEM.
RU66179U1 (en) VOLKOV-TSAYA CLAMP FOR FIXING AND REPAIRING BONE FRACTURES IN Fractures of the lower jaw
CN108451561A (en) A kind of medical operation incision distraction device tool
CN213283456U (en) Hand surgery operation fixing guider
SU736971A1 (en) Jawbone repositioning device
CN212213905U (en) Finger fixer for hand surgery