Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Scalpel


A scalpel is a thin, small, very sharp knife. Scalpels are famously used in surgery, but there are also versions for crafts. Medical supply companies sell surgical scalpels, although some restrict their sale to physicians only, while craft scalpels can be obtained in any good craft store. This icon of the surgical trade is a tremendously useful tool inside and outside the operating room, and a basic craft scalpel can be a very handy thing to keep around the house for various projects.

There are two parts to the scalpel: a handle and a blade. The handle is reusable, and in the case of a surgical scalpel, designed to undergo sterilization. The blade, which can be removed, is disposable. With a surgical scalpel, the blade is changed between patients, both to reduce the risk of transmitting disease, and to ensure that the blade is as sharp as possible for each new patient. With craft scalpels, the blade is replaced when it starts to dull and become less effective.

Some companies make blades which can be resharpened and used again. Sharpening a scalpel blade is tricky, because the blade is thin, very fine, and delicate, and it is easy to damage the blade to create a burr which cannot be removed. In the case of surgical scalpels, sharpening can also create hairline cracks and gouges in the surface which may become home to disease-carrying organisms, which is undesirable.

It is also possible to purchase an entire scalpel as a disposable unit. In this case, the handle is often made from plastic, and the blade may be designed to retract into the blade, staying covered until needed and then being retracted back into the blade for disposal.

Scalpel blades should be disposed of safely, craft or otherwise. The blades are very sharp, and could hurt someone if they were disposed of uncovered. In hospitals, a sharps container is used to hold use scalpels. Craft blades should be wrapped or secured before being thrown away so that waste management personnel don't cut themselves handling the garbage. Some replacement blade sets come in a small box which allows people to insert used blades into the bottom and take fresh blades from the top, using the whole box as a sharps container for disposal once it has filled with dulled blades.
In medicine, lasers are also used for cutting in some procedures. A laser may be referred to as a “laser scalpel” even though it doesn't cut in the way that a traditional knife does. The energy of the light from the laser actually vaporizes the tissue it targets. While this sounds rather brutal, it can actually be less invasive than a traditional knife, and using lasers cuts down healing time, reduces patient discomfort after surgery, and reduces the risk of some surgical complications.

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