Surgical Disposable Sterile Skin Stapler w/Enhanced Control, 35 Preloaded Staples

Surgical Disposable Sterile Skin Stapler w/Enhanced Control, 35 Preloaded Staples
  • Skin Stapler Sterile with 35 Staples 35W

I had a horse that had a pretty good gash and happened to have this staple gun in my first aid kit so I figured I would give it a shot. My neighbor is a doctor, she helped and it worked perfect. She was very impressed with how smooth it was and said she thinks this one would work better than the one she uses in her clinic because their is no loud clicks, which makes people (especially kids) jerk. I bought two more replacements.

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Product worked very well. Used it to repair a Walker hound after an encounter with a large black bear. One of the wounds was 6 to 8 inches long, treated with a disinfectant/antibiotic and stapled it up. By the next weekend the wound was fully healed.

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If you have ever been in a situation that required you to suture yourself or someone, else (usually, due to being in mountains or jungles, etc...) THIS is the "only" way to go. CLIP-CLIP-CLIP, instead of SEW-SEW-SEW. This method "can" be done wthout anesthesia, if the situation calls for it. The sewing thing, without anesthesia of some type, can be a true b----!! This, I say, from my own "personal" experiences

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I'm an EMT in Alaska. We use these babies in our ambulances and I've used 2 of them on car accident victims. They work well to get a patient from the Alaskan wilderness to the hospital. We put them in ziplocks to protect against moisture because the packaging is a little weak. THESE ARE NOT A PERMANENT WOUND SOLUTION!!! If you use these you need to go to the hospital and have professional medical aid.

One observation about this item is that I carry one of them in a padded, watertight first aid kit in my tractor toolbox. It comes pre-sterilized and sealed and its packaging does look fairly water resistant, but I don't trust its long term retention of sterility and function in the rain. (Yes I know this is a comment about packaging, but a big part of the item cost is its sterility. Thus you cannot separate the individual packaging from the stapler itself due to the nature of the product.)

Edited to add the comments that sutures are really better for tight closure, but I've never really been happy tying one handed knots, even when I was on ER rotation in school and was supervised by senior resident surgeons. Since most of my farming-related injuries which require emergency closure are on either the hand or arm the stapler is much easier to use. With it you don't have to juggle suture, needle clamp and scissors while keeping the extra suture material in your sterile field. You just staple, staple, staple, staple. Obviously, people who use this item should be trained medical professionals, or have experience and training since stapling injuries is not something that a person should take lightly.

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