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- Q1257516 subject Q8630424.
- Q1257516 subject Q9159846.
- Q1257516 abstract "Esmarch bandage (also known as Esmarch's bandage for surgical haemostasis or Esmarch's tourniquet) in its modern form is a narrow (5 to 10 cm wide) soft rubber bandage that is used to expel venous blood from a limb (exsanguinate) that has had its arterial supply cut off by a tourniquet. The limb is often elevated as the elastic pressure is applied.The exsanguination is necessary to enable some types of delicate reconstructive surgery where bleeding would obscure the working area. A bloodless area is also required to introduce local anaesthetic agents for a regional nerve block. This method was first described by Augustus Bier in 1908.((Translated and reprinted in Survey of Anesthesiology1967,11, 293-)The original version was designed by Friedrich von Esmarch, professor of surgery at the University of Kiel, Germany, and is generally used in battlefield medicine. Esmarch himself had been Surgeon General to the German army during the Franco-German War. It consisted of a three-sided piece of linen or cotton, the base measuring 4 feet and the sides 2 feet 10 inches. It could be used folded or open, and applied in thirty-two different ways. An improved form was devised by Bernhard von Langenbeck later on.".
- Q1257516 thumbnail Esmarch_original.jpg?width=300.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q1132870.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q156737.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q2024794.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q46083.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q477415.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q66339.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q71011.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q8630424.
- Q1257516 wikiPageWikiLink Q9159846.
- Q1257516 comment "Esmarch bandage (also known as Esmarch's bandage for surgical haemostasis or Esmarch's tourniquet) in its modern form is a narrow (5 to 10 cm wide) soft rubber bandage that is used to expel venous blood from a limb (exsanguinate) that has had its arterial supply cut off by a tourniquet. The limb is often elevated as the elastic pressure is applied.The exsanguination is necessary to enable some types of delicate reconstructive surgery where bleeding would obscure the working area.".
- Q1257516 label "Esmarch bandage".
- Q1257516 depiction Esmarch_original.jpg.