FLASHCUTTER alat khitan /sunat /sirkumsisi canggih

Daftar Barang dan Harga

15 Agustus 2009 — Flashcutter Alat Khitan/Sunat/Sirkumsisi | Sunting

KATALOG PRODUK Flashcutter Easy Release DC107

Oktober 21, 2008

Alat khitan elektrik tanpa listrik ( bertenaga baterai)

Type Standard

Harga : Rp.1.495.000,-

Kemasan : 1 paket dalam 1tas berisi :

1 unit generator flashcutter, 1buah handel standard, 3buah clipper(pemotong). 1 buah probe yang dapat dimodifikasi untuk insisi maupun penghenti pendarahan, 5 buah mata pisau/probe cadangan, 1kabel untuk charger, buku petunjuk, VCD, kartu garansi, doek sirkumsisi, headlamp.

Spesifikasi:

  • Bentuk elegant dikemas dalam sebuah tas medis yang pantas dipakai para profesional, enjoy dibawa kemana saja.
  • Kemampuan khitan lebih dari100X sekali isi baterai (charging), cocok untuk khitan masal maupun untuk klinik anda
  • Power supply berteknologi tinggi buatan Matsushita Jepang, menjamin stabilitas pemakaian.
  • Baterai  dapat bertahan sampai bertahun-tahun tanpa harus ganti.
  • Bonus doek sirkumsisi dan headlamp.
  • Garansi 1tahun
  • Sparepart tersedia.

Type Standardpro.

Harga : Rp.1.795.000,-

Kemasan : 1paket dalam 1tas berisi :

1 unit generator flashcutter, 1buah handel pro(pistol), 3buah clipper(pemotong). 1 buah probe yang dapat dimodifikasi untuk insisi maupun penghenti pendarahan, 5 buah mata pisau/probe cadangan, 1kabel untuk charger, buku petunjuk, VCD, kartu garansi, doek sirkumsisi, headlamp.

Spesifikasi Sama dengan type standard kecuali :

Handelpro berbentuk pistol variabel yang dilengkapi knop untuk berbagai keperluan, High, Midle, Low.

Jika handle pro ini dipasang pada socket generator, maka semua fungsi tombol pada generator secara otomatis diambil alih oleh handle canggih ini. Artinya kita tidak perlu lagi menyentuh tombol-tombol pada generator saat operasi berlangsung, hal ini juga dapat menjadi pertimbangan jika operasi dilakukan di area steril.

Handle pro dibuat dari bahan isolator yang ringan dan tidak menjalarkan panas dan arus listrik.

Type Turbopro

Harga : Rp.2.550.000,-

Kemasan : 1paket dalam 1tas berisi :1 unit generator flashcutter, 1buah handel pro(pistol), 3buah clipper(pemotong). 1 buah probe yang dapat dimodifikasi untuk insisi maupun penghenti pendarahan, 5 buah mata pisau/probe cadangan, 1kabel untuk charger, buku petunjuk, VCD, kartu garansi, doek sirkumsisi, headlamp. Headphone, sensor, head sensor, kabel audio ke komputer.

Spesifikasi :

Type ini sama dengan tipe standardpro, namun dilengkapi dengan alat bantu diagnosis berupa stethoskop elektronik dan dopler. Kepekaan stetoskop Turbo ini melebihi stetoskop termahal sekalipun. Dilengkapi pengatur kepekaan yang dapat anda atur sesuai kebutuhan semisal pemeriksaan jantung, pernafasan atau peristaltik usus. Untuk kebidanan alat ini dapat bekerja sebagai dopler dengan audio yang lebih sempurna, jernih dan lebih sensitif. Anda juga dapat menghubungkan alat ini dengan komputer di klinik anda untuk memantau perjalanan pemeriksaan anda dalam bentuk spectrum grafis yang ditampilkan di layar monitor. Sehingga pasien di klinik anda merasa mendapat pelayanan yang lebih dari sebelumnya.

PEMESANAN FLASHCUTTER

Via email :

jalulaki@gmail.com

Via telepon

0817333354 / 0817354354

Semoga bermanfaat.

Terimakasih. Anda telah memilih FLASHCUTTER . Kami senantiasa berinovasi agar dapat menyumbangkan teknologi tepat guna yang sederhana, ekonomis, mudah digunakan dan yang paling penting adalah jaminan keamanan serta garansi 1 tahun.

Fungsi Flashcutter

Flashcutter dirancang untuk peralatan operasi kecil pada kulit. Semisal Khitan (circumcision), pengangkatan kutil atau tumor kecil di kulit atau area genital dan anus.

Keunggulan Flashcutter

1. Pisau tajam dan cepat, menjamin hasil luka operasi lurus dan steril.

2. Luka bakar minim ( jaringan tidak matang/combust ).

3. Aman karena bertenaga baterai, voltase kecil berteknologi tinggi.

4. Efektif/efisien tanpa kabel tertambat jaringan listrik, cocok untuk khitan masal karena 1x charger cukup untuk 100x khitan. Dapat dipakai di mana pun tanpa bergantung jaringan listrik.

5. Dilengkapi pengaman ganda, alarm, dan auto switch yang secara automatis sistem tidak bekerja ketika pisau terjatuh saat diaktifkan.

6. Sparepart mudah didapat.

7. Model HITECH dengan performa canggih terkemas dalam Flashcutter bag.

8. Dilengkapi 10 buah mata pisau cadangan yang dapat anda kreasi/modifikasi sesuai keperluan anda.


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MUSIUM KHITAN

  • Visit the Museum
  • Explore the Collections
  • What’s On
  • Anthropology and World Archaeology, University of Oxford

    Surgical Instruments

    Surgery is the branch of medicine that treats illness or injury through operative procedures.

    In the United Kingdom, surgery to some extent developed separately from medicine, with surgery initially being performed by barber-surgeons, and medicine being practised by physicians with a university medical degree. Even today, the distinction is still observed, with the title of ‘Mr’, ‘Ms’, ‘Mrs’ or ‘Miss’ being used by surgeons rather than ‘Dr’. Amongst the Maasai of Kenya a similar division applies: surgery is carried out by a class of surgeons who treat both humans and animals. However, in other cultures, surgery is performed by a more generalist doctor, and it is not perceived as being distinct from other aspects of medicine.

    Location of countries from which the objects mentioned in this fact sheet come:

    Malaysia Map
    African countries
    Australia factsheets

    Trepanation

    The earliest known surgery was carried out more than 5,000 years ago. One of the procedures performed was trepanation, which involved drilling a hole in the skull. The purpose of this operation is not always clear, but, in different contexts, it has been done to relieve pressure on the brain, to cure headaches, to remove damaged bone, or to release evil spirits. Evidence for trepanation comes from archaeological sites in the Americas, Oceania, and Europe, suggesting it was a remarkably widespread practice.

    Trepanation Tools, Algeria
    Trepanation Tools, Algeria, 1913.17.85-.97

    Anthropologists in the early twentieth century reported that trepanation was still occurring in a number of places, notably Algeria, elsewhere in Africa, Bolivia, Peru, and Oceania. Although it is a relatively difficult and delicate procedure, survival rates reported by anthropologists, and skulls from archaeological contexts showing post-operative healing, suggest an impressive rate of success. The trepanation tools pictured below were collected in the Aurès (east Atlas) Mountains in Algeria. They were donated to the Museum in 1913. With the tools (in a small box at the bottom of the picture) there are also small pieces of bone taken from a man’s skull during a trepanation operation.

    The surgical instruments displayed in the Museum come from Europe, Asia, Oceania, and Africa: however many of them are designed for carrying out similar operations, in particular circumcision, cauterizing, severing the umbilical cord, blood letting, opening boils and abscesses, and removal of the uvula (the small piece of soft tissue that hangs down at the back of the throat) and tonsils.

    Cauterizations

    Cautery, Somalia
    Cautery, Somalia, 1936.16.15

    Cauterization is the destruction of tissue for medical reasons by burning it with a hot iron, an electric current or a caustic, or by freezing it. In modern western medicine, a cautery is used to stop small lesions bleeding, or to eradicate a wart or other benign lesion.

    In the past, and in other cultures, hot iron cauteries have been widely used, especially as a method of controlling bleeding. Amongst the Chaouia Berber of the Aurès Mountains of Algeria in the 1920s, cauteries were used to control haemorrhages, treat spleen disorders, to open abscesses, to destroy hernial sacks, and to heal sores, ulcers, and wounds.

    Cauteries have also been used for ‘counter-irritation’. This was designed to cause pain or irritation in one part of the body in order to relieve pain or inflammation in another area.

    This cautery from Somalia consisted of a nail fixed to a stick. It was designed to cure pain by counter-iriritation.

    Circumcision

    Circumcision knife, Nigeria
    Circumcision knife, Nigeria, 1949.7.26

    Male circumcision is practised all over the world, for medical, religious, and ritual reasons. The operation involves cutting away all or part of the foreskin of the penis, and is usually undertaken either in infancy or at puberty.

    Although its origins are unknown, earliest evidence of the practice dates from ancient Egypt, where boys were generally circumcised between the ages of six and twelve years. Circumcision of males has been widely practised as a religious rite. It is an initiatory rite of Judaism: Jewish boys are generally circumcised on the eighth day after their birth, as a fulfillment of a covenant between God and Abraham. Circumcision is also practised by Muslims, for whom it signifies spiritual purification. In other cultures, circumcision is often associated with puberty rites.

    This clip from Malaysia was collected in the early twentieth century. It was used to hold back the foreskin, whilst a knife was used to do the cutting.

    Circumcision Clip, MalaysiaCircumcision Clip, Malaysia, 1909.23.2

    Female circumcision is a term used to cover a range of procedures, from the drawing of blood, to the complete removal of the external sexual organs. The practice of female circumcision dates to ancient times, and it is still practised in many parts of the world. The knife and sheath pictured above were used for female circumcision. They were collected in Somalia in 1934­1935.

    Female circumcision knife, Somalia,
    Female circumcision knife, Somalia, 1936.16.10

    Childbirth

    The Museum’s collections contain a number of knives from around the world, which were used to cut the umbilical cord after childbirth. These knives have been made from different materials in different places, reflecting the different materials available and different cultural and medical beliefs.

    The iron knife pictured below is from Mozambique. It was purchased by the Museum in 1937.

     Knife, Mozambique
    Knife, Mozambique, 1937.52.31

    The bamboo knife pictured below was collected in 1901­1902 in the Kampong area of Malaysia or Thailand where umbilical cord knives were made of bamboo, as it was believed that metal knives would cause fever.

    Knife, Malaysia/Thailand,Knife, Malaysia/Thailand, 1902.42.2

    Materials for Medical Instruments

    Knife, Australia
    Knife, Australia, 1900.55.225.1

    Medical instruments can be made from almost any material. Whilst wood and metal are the most common materials for the instruments on display in the Museum, a wide variety of other materials are also represented, including naturally sharp materials such as thorns and sharks’ teeth.

    This knife from the Northern Territory of Australia has a blade of flaked, recycled glass, a gum handle, and a paper-bark sheath. It was donated to the Museum in 1900.

    Sources

    HILTON SIMPSON, MELVILLE, ‘Some Arab and Shawia Remedies and Notes on the Trepanning of the Skull in Algeria’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol 43 (1913), pp. 706–721.

    KIRKUP, JOHN, ‘Shawiya Berber Surgical Instruments in the Aures Mountains, 1913-1922’, Congress Proceedings of the International Society for History of Medicine (1998).

    LOUGHBOROUGH, JOHN, ‘Notes on the Trepanation of Prehistoric Crania’, American Anthropologist, Vol 48, no 3 (1946), pp. 416–422.

    Fact Sheet compiled by:
    Bryony Reid, Senior Project Assistant (Interpretation)
    DCF What’s Upstairs?
    October 2005

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