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General Anesthesia Contributes to Post-op Pain

Some "noxious" general anesthetics excite sensory neurons that cause peripheral pain in patients once they wake from surgery, researchers say. I...

WHO Issues Surgical Safety Checklist

The World Health Organization and the Harvard University School of Public Health have created a new perioperative checklist for surgical team member...

Surgical Business Ethics in the Press

It's no secret that some leading orthopedic surgeons receive six- and seven-figure payments annually from the makers of artificial hips and knees. B...

Home > Archive > February 2005
Thinking of Buying...Electrosurgical Generators
Power, waveforms, extra features and disposables comprise the purchasing keys.
Scotty Farris

We can trace electrosurgery as we know it today to the work of William T. Bovie, PhD, a physicist who pioneered research in high-frequency electrical power. In 1924, fellow Harvard academic Harvey W. Cushing, MD, a neurosurgeon and professor of surgery, saw Dr. Bovie's device in action: "I happened to see Dr. Bovie's electrified loop being used for the purpose of bloodlessly scooping out bits of malignant tissue for examination," he wrote. "I realize that here was a new tool which might possibly be utilized." The Liebel-Flarsheim Company in 1927 manufactured the first commercially produced electrosurgical unit of a Bovie design.

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