Guess it... or ask a queston.!!!

Mr Doodlebug Offline
No, but they are used to remove something from the body, and then put something else back.
No anaesthetic is required.
cluelusshusbund Offline
(Apr 12, 2015 11:50 AM)Mr Doodlebug Wrote: No, but they are used to remove something from the body, and then put something else back.
No anaesthetic is required.

Does it have to do wit people/animals that are unconscious.???

Some sort of anal... nasal... ear... urinary track or throat probe.???
Mr Doodlebug Offline
They are not conscious.
The triple blade is made so that the skin can be sewn up neatly once the operation is finished.
People often say that the person looks "beautiful" once this and other procedures are performed.
elte Offline
Are they liposuction attachments???
Mr Doodlebug Offline
Liposuction Attachments ?
No. liposuction tools are not too dissimilar. But these ones suck something out
Then something else is pumped back in.
cluelusshusbund Offline
Its tools used in new facelift procedures that sucks out fat... an then squirts in a substance that shrinks over time makin the skin tighter an wrinkles disapear... an its all done while the patient is just below a conscious state made posible by advanced electro-acupuncture techniques.!!!
Mr Doodlebug Offline
No acupuncture. Nothing like that.
The instruments cut through the skin and enter the abdominal cavity .
The person performing the procedure usually has no medical qualifications.
elte Offline
Are they tips that remove body fluids and then replace them with embalming fluids?  
Mr Doodlebug Offline
We have a
Winer!!!

Cavity treatment starts with aspirating (suctioning) fluids out of the internal organs in the abdomen and thoracic cavity. This is accomplished with the use of a trocar, a long metal tube with sharp blades at one end and a connector for a hose at the other. The hose is connected to a device that creates suction, either an electric aspirator or water powered aspirator (called a hydro-aspirator) and then connected to the trocar. The sharp blades on the trocar are used to pierce through the abdomen near the belly button. From this entry point, the embalmer directs the trocar towards and pierces all the internal organs, allowing the trocar to remain in each organ long enough to suction off the fluids.

The hose is disconnected from the aspirator and connected to an adapter that screws directly onto the bottle of cavity fluid. The trocar is once again pierced into the organs and the cavity fluid flows into them by simple gravity. Usually two bottles of full strength fluid are used to treat the entire thoracic and abdominal cavities. Cavity fluids are very similar to arterial fluids, containing about the same percentage of formaldehyde. However, cavity fluids are slightly more acidic than arterial fluids so that they produce firmer tissues in a faster time. Some cavity fluids even come with a fresh wintergreen scent!

Once the cavities have been treated, the trocar is removed and a "trocar button" is screwed into the hole in the abdomen that was used to access the organs. A trocar button looks much like a large plastic screw.
http://www.embalming.net/cavity.htm

elte Offline
(Apr 13, 2015 01:37 PM)Mr Doodlebug Wrote: We have a
Winer!!!

Cavity treatment starts with aspirating (suctioning) fluids out of the internal organs in the abdomen and thoracic cavity. This is accomplished with the use of a trocar, a long metal tube with sharp blades at one end and a connector for a hose at the other. The hose is connected to a device that creates suction, either an electric aspirator or water powered aspirator (called a hydro-aspirator) and then connected to the trocar. The sharp blades on the trocar are used to pierce through the abdomen near the belly button. From this entry point, the embalmer directs the trocar towards and pierces all the internal organs, allowing the trocar to remain in each organ long enough to suction off the fluids.

The hose is disconnected from the aspirator and connected to an adapter that screws directly onto the bottle of cavity fluid. The trocar is once again pierced into the organs and the cavity fluid flows into them by simple gravity. Usually two bottles of full strength fluid are used to treat the entire thoracic and abdominal cavities. Cavity fluids are very similar to arterial fluids, containing about the same percentage of formaldehyde. However, cavity fluids are slightly more acidic than arterial fluids so that they produce firmer tissues in a faster time. Some cavity fluids even come with a fresh wintergreen scent!

Once the cavities have been treated, the trocar is removed and a "trocar button" is screwed into the hole in the abdomen that was used to access the organs. A trocar button looks much like a large plastic screw.
http://www.embalming.net/cavity.htm


Winer!!! "

Yay!


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