Electrocautery

Application of a needle or snare heated by an electric current to destroy tissue (e.g., to remove warts).


A surgical instrument that uses an electrical current to remove abnormal or diseased tissue or to control bleeding from small blood vessels. Also known as electrocoagulation, the device consists of a platinum wire that becomes white- or red-hot when an electrical current passes through it.


The destruction of diseased or unwanted tissue by means of a needle or snare that is electrically heated. Warts, polyps, and other growths can be burned away by this method; the electricity does not pass through the tissues themselves.


The use of an electrically heated needle or loop to destroy diseased or unwanted tissue. Benign growths, warts and polyps can be removed with this technique.


Cauterization using a variety of electrical modalities to create thermal energy, including a directly heated metallic applicator, or bipolar or monopolar electrodes.


The employment of a diminutive electrical instrument, operating at a low voltage, with the intention of excising tissue via the method of cauterization, which involves controlled burning.


Electrocautery is a method that eradicates tissue by employing heat generated from an electric current. It is commonly used to eliminate skin irregularities like warts.


A device featuring a platinum wire tip capable of being electrically heated to a subdued red hue, employed for the purpose of ablating tissues and minor growths, as well as for the coagulation of small blood vessels. In certain surgical procedures, it serves as an alternative to a scalpel for cutting specific types of tissues.


 


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