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tenaculum
[ tuh-nak-yuh-luhm ]
noun
- Surgery. a small sharp-pointed hook set in a handle, used for seizing and picking up parts in operations and dissections.
- Entomology. a clasplike appendage on the abdomen of a springtail, which holds the springing device in place.
tenaculum
/ tɪˈnækjʊləm /
noun
- a surgical or dissecting instrument for grasping and holding parts, consisting of a slender hook mounted in a handle
Word History and Origins
Origin of tenaculum1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tenaculum1
Example Sentences
Using a tenaculum, a scissor-like surgical tool, the physician steadies the cervix.
“The parts that hurt for some patients — just placing the speculum is uncomfortable — placing the tenaculum is the first part that's not just pressure that can sometimes feel sharp,” Espey told Salon.
On the first day of training, a doctor had come in, a chic, funny woman who walked through the mechanics of the procedure, passing around medical instruments: a tenaculum, metal dilators.
Liston closed off the main artery with a square knot and then turned his attention to the smaller blood vessels, which he drew up one by one using a sharp hook called a tenaculum.
Burns, a collector of early medical photography and devices, gently scolds Radnor for referring to a tenaculum as a shepherd's hook: "That's like referring to rocket propulsion in 1862!"
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