Epidural Needles & Catheter Kit

Touhy Epidural Needle & Catheter

Epidural needles (Tuohy/Crawford) feature blunt, curved tips to identify the epidural space via loss‑of‑resistance. Catheters threaded through them deliver continuous analgesia. Mastering needle selection, LOR technique, catheter depth (3–5 cm), and mandatory test dosing prevents dural puncture, intravascular placement, and catheter complications.

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Spinal Needles

A set of Quincke Spinal Needle

Spinal needle tip design determines PDPH risk, CSF flow, and ease of insertion. Cutting needles (Quincke) slice dura, causing higher headache rates. Pencil-point needles (Whitacre, Sprotte, Gertie Marx) spread dural fibers, dramatically reducing PDPH. Choosing the right needle and gauge is essential for safe, successful spinal anesthesia.

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Suction Device & Yankauer Sucker

For the anesthesiologist, a functional suction device is non-negotiable. While airway devices (laryngoscopes, ETTs) secure the airway, suction maintains it. In moments of crisis—laryngospasm, regurgitation, massive hemorrhage, or vomit—the speed and effectiveness of suction directly determine patient outcomes.

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Gas Scavenging System

The gas scavenging system captures waste anesthetic gases from the breathing circuit, protecting OR staff from chronic exposure risks. It consists of a collection interface, transfer tubing, and active or passive disposal. Proper function prevents barotrauma, negative pressure injury, and environmental pollution—making daily pre-use checks essential for safety.

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CO₂ Absorber

The CO₂ absorber is the chemical device that removes this exhaled CO₂, allowing for low fresh gas flow (FGF) anesthesia. By scrubbing CO₂, it enables rebreathing of oxygen, volatile anesthetics, and inert carrier gases—conserving heat, humidity, and costly agents.

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The Circle Breathing System & Corrugated Tubing

Circle Breathing System

The circle breathing system recycles exhaled gases, conserving heat, humidity, and agent. Its corrugated tubing is not just a hose—it provides kink resistance, low resistance, and circuit compliance. Master its seven components and you master safe ventilation, from pre-use check to troubleshooting leaks or CO₂ rebreathing.

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The pneumatic tourniquet

Pneumatic Tourniquet

The pneumatic tourniquet is a masterpiece of applied physiology and engineering. While it appears simple—a cuff, a pump, a gauge—its proper use demands vigilance. It saves lives and limbs not by being spectacular, but by being reliably controlled.

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Defibrillator / AED

defibrillator

The defibrillator is your definitive therapy for VF and pulseless VT in the OR. Know the difference: defibrillation (asynchronous, high energy) vs. cardioversion (synchronized). Turn it on, apply pads, charge to 120 J, call “CLEAR!”, and shock. Then resume CPR. Speed saves lives.

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