Curettage and Cautery - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Curettage and Cautery

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From the Latin curare, to care for or to cure. Then to the French curer, to cure. ... Needs local anaesthesia. Cheap machines readily available. Quick to use. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Curettage and Cautery


1
Curettage and Cautery
  • www.bradfordvts.co.uk

2
Curette
  • From the Latin curare, to care for or to cure.
  • Then to the French curer, to cure.
  • Bronze curettes have been found in Egyptian tombs!

3
Cautery
  • From the Latin cauterium, a branding iron.
  • An old usage is a cauterant, a chemical used to
    burn!
  • Used for several thousand years

4
Cautery
  • One of the earliest surgical techniques and one
    that is still very useful especially in a general
    practice setting.
  • It is often quick to perform and provided simple
    precautions are observed it is safe and
    effective.

5
Cautery
  • As a additional incentive the "Minor surgery"
    scheme allows most forms of cautery to be a
    claimable "minor op".
  • The regulations are not specific as to what
    constitutes claimable cautery so the
    interpretation can be fairly broad.

6
Cautery
  • There are 3 types of cautery relevant to general
    practice, the use of specialist operating
    theatre type equipment is out side the normal
    scope of general practice.
  • These are Cryocautery, Chemical cautery and
    Electro cautery hot wire - DC types .
  • All have uses in general practice.

7
Cautery
  • By definition cautery does not produce a tissue
    sample for histology ( unless used as a adjuvant
    in another procedure) so it must Never be used
    if there is any doubt as to the nature of the
    lesion.
  • Medical records must be meticulous as to the
    procedure and the diagnosis of the lesion
    concerned.
  • As in all things there is no substitute for
    practical experience, Good sources of practical
    training are Dermatology outpatients, ENT
    outpatients, AE and gynae - but your training
    practice may the best bet!

8
Cryocautery
  • Works by causing cellular lysis after freeze thaw
    cycle, relatively painless with liquid nitrogen
    but stings with warmer techniques.
  • There are 4 different techniques, carbon dioxide
    snow(now rarely used), liquid nitrogen, nitrous
    oxide and commercial freezing mixtures (e.g.
    Histofreeze).

9
Liquid Nitrogen
  • Very cold and causes lots of tissue destruction
    can be over applied and cause full thickness skin
    loss.
  • Only one application usually needed. Applied
    with cotton wool buds or proprietary sprays.
  • Can be kept in a Dewar flask(fancy thermos) for 2
    days.
  • BOC won't sell small amounts so need to arrange
    supply from local hospital or industry.
  • This means saving up suitable patients and
    arranging a special session.

10
Nitrous Oxide
  • Used to cool special heads via gun.
  • Difficult to over treat lesion, may need 2-3 goes
    to clear thicker lesions - about 10-14 days
    apart.
  • Always to hand from cylinder, gas prescribable
    on FP10.
  • Convenient and to hand but more painful and needs
    more treatment, less skill needed.

11
What for?
  • Suitable for surface skin lesions of known type,
    e.g. viral warts, seb. warts, small moles,
    Keratoacanthoma, solar keratosis etc.

12
Warnings to Patients
  • The patient should be warned that the treated
    lesion will throb for up to 12 hours, paracetamol
    may be suitable.
  • The lesion will blister, the blister should not
    be "popped" if possible but allowed to dry off as
    "natural" dressing.
  • This area of dead skin will slough off 7-14 days
    after treatment leaving a red area.
  • The red area will fade to normal colour after up
    to 12 weeks - usually 6.

13
Electro-cautery
  • Works by simple burning of tissue via DC current.
    Needs local anaesthesia.
  • Cheap machines readily available.
  • Quick to use.
  • Very easy to cause marked scars, good
    haemostasis.

14
Electro-cautery
  • Unsuitable for viral warts as highest recurrence
    rate of any wart therapy.
  • May be useful adjuvant to straight scalpel
    surgery for stopping bleeding.
  • Needle point tips available for the treatment of
    spider naevi and capillary flares.

15
Chemical Cautery
  • The chemical destruction of a surface lesion.
  • Usually employs silver nitrate.
  • This comes in the forms of pencils - sold to the
    public (!) for shaving cuts, but a simple cheap
    source for certain applications.

16
Chemical Cautery
  • It is also available on sticks - looking like a
    very long match with a black head.
  • These are very cheap.
  • They need storage in a dry dark place.
  • Silver nitrate stains clothing, worktops and
    skin, WARN the patients and always wear gloves
    when handling.

17
Chemical Cautery
  • The stain will go as the top layer of skin is
    shed.
  • The lesion or the head of the stick needs to be
    moist to work, it is usual to dip in a galipot
    with some water and knock off excess water before
    use.

18
Nasal Cautery
  • Cautery to Little's area for recurrent nose
    bleeds is a quick and simple procedure, well
    within the remit of general practice.
  • It should only be done when the practitioner has
    had supervised prior experience.

19
Nasal Cautery
  • The area needs to well visualized with good
    lighting.
  • It should also only be done if a obvious vessel
    is seen to cauterise - one is not trying to burn
    the whole nasal septum!
  • The technique is not suitable when there is
    active bleeding.

20
Nasal Cautery
  • The area needs to be free of debris and large
    clots, washing the area with Adrenaline diluted
    to about 1 in 10,000 from a syringe without a
    needle will remove debris and will usually
    temporarily stop bleeding.
  • The upper lip should be covered with Vaseline to
    prevent chemical burns to the upper lip -
    medico-legally important

21
Nasal Cautery
  • And the patient warned to leave the Vaseline on
    over night.
  • The procedure may need to be repeated.
  • It is unsuitable for nasal bleeding other than
    from Little's area.
  • After preparation the area is simply touched with
    the stick using a rolling movement.

22
Granuloma cautery
  • Post op, bits of granuloma tissue in wounds can
    be simply touched to induce involution.
  • Pyogenic granuloma can be easily and quickly
    treated. The pressure required on the lesion may
    be quite painful.

23
Adjuvant
  • Can usefully be employed to stop bleeding from a
    raw area, particularly useful after a shave
    excision.
  • MUST not be used to stop bleeding if the treated
    area is in a wound - the silver nitrate
    incorporated into deeper layers will cause
    considerable damage.

24
Curettage
  • Allowable under the minor surgery scheme.
  • Usually needs some sort of anaesthetic.
  • Produces tissue for cytology, NOT histology.
  • Quick and simple.
  • Surface lesions only.
  • Often blunt.
  • Possible to sharpen them!

25
Curettage
  • Disposable curettes cost 2-3 each. Very sharp!
  • A joy to use!
  • 4mm and 7mm ring sizes available.
  • Any surface skin lesions that one is pretty sure
    of!
  • May need to apply haemostatic.
  • Avoid on possible carcinomas!

26
Curettage
  • Specially good for
  • Seborrhoeic warts
  • Kerato-acanthomas
  • Skin tags
  • Facial warts
  • Pyogenic granuloma
  • (Chalazions)
  • If it extends beyond the dermis excise it!

27
Curettage
  • Basal cell carcinomas.
  • Said to be good.
  • 90 cure with selected lesions.
  • Maybe a place in elderly and infirm.
  • I dont do it intentionally!
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