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Device spots sponges left behind.


Major operations require dozens of sponges--pieces of gauze gauze (gawz) a light, open-meshed fabric of muslin or similar material.

absorbable gauze  gauze made from oxidized cellulose.
 used to mop up blood--and surgical teams keep track of them by counting how many go in and come out. However, sponges are the surgical objects most often left in patients. Surgeons may soon have a new way to detect sponges accidentally left inside a patient.

Gauze left inside a patient can cause inflammation, infection, and intestinal blockages. An earlier study showed that 57 patients in the United States died from foreign bodies left inside them in 2000.

In the July Archives of Surgery The Archives of Surgery is a monthly professional medical journal published by the American Medical Association. Archives of Surgery publishes original, peer-reviewed clinical and basic research articles addressing new operative techniques, important clinical findings, and , researchers report that in tests during operations, doctors promptly located stray sponges labeled with radiofrequency identification chips.

The physicians tested the new technology on eight volunteers who were undergoing abdominal surgery. Near the completion of each operation, one surgeon looked away as another placed a few tagged sponges and one untagged sponge inside the surgical cavity and then closed, but didn't suture suture /su·ture/ (soo´cher)
1. sutura.

2. a stitch or series of stitches made to secure apposition of the edges of a surgical or traumatic wound.

3. to apply such stitches.

4.
, the wound. The labeled sponges had radiofrequeney tags the size of a nickel sewn into them.

The other surgeon then used a wand to scan the patient externally for the labeled sponges. The surgeons located all the tagged sponges, says coauthor Alex Macario, an anesthesiologist Anesthesiologist
A medical specialist who administers an anesthetic to a patient before he is treated.

Mentioned in: Anesthesia, General, Appendectomy, Parathyroidectomy

anesthesiologist
 at Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine is affiliated with Stanford University and is located at Stanford University Medical Center in Stanford, California, adjacent to Palo Alto and Menlo Park. .

The new device will require regulatory approval. --N.S.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 29, 2006
Words:214
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