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* from the ''Virtual Museum of Equipment for Airway Management'' at the Austrian Difficult Airway/Intubation Registry * from the ''Virtual Museum of Equipment for Airway Management'' at the Austrian Difficult Airway/Intubation Registry


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Revision as of 20:48, 24 February 2007

In the context of surgery or dental surgery, a gag is a device used to hold the patient's mouth open when working in the oral cavity, or to force the mouth open when it cannot open naturally because of forward dislocation of the jaw joint's intraarticular cartilage pad. Applications for medical gags include oral surgery and airway management. Gag designs, like other medical instrument designs, are often named after their invertors. Common examples of medical gags include the Jennings, Whitehead, and Hallam gags.

  • The Whitehead gag --invented in 1877 by Walter Whitehead (1840-1913), a surgeon in Manchester, England-- consists of two hinged metal frames that wrap around the front of the patient's head and which have sections bent to fit between the front teeth. When spread apart, the frames separate the jaws, holding the mouth open. The desired degree of separation is set and maintained by a ratchet mechanism on each side of the frame.
  • In Jennings gags --which are very similar in other respects-- there is a ratchet on only one side.

Non-Medical Uses

These type of gags have also been given a niche within sexual fetish or bondage play. In this context, the matrix are often fitted with belts that wrap around the wearer's head.

See also

External links

  • Mouth gags index page from the Virtual Museum of Equipment for Airway Management at the Austrian Difficult Airway/Intubation Registry


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