Adson Dressing Forceps — Standard Smooth Jaw
Alfred Washington Adson (1887-1951), Mayo Clinic neurosurgeon who in 1927 published the first systematic series of pituitary-adenoma transsphenoidal resections and who founded the Mayo neurosurgical service that remains one of the leading centres of the discipline, designed multiple instruments during a productive career — but the dressing forceps that bears his name is the one most operators reach for daily. The Adson dressing forceps is the everyday smooth-jaw tissue forceps that handles every closure step from skin to fascia without crushing delicate vascular structures.
Why this is the default surgical forceps
The Adson’s combination of fine jaw closure, spring-action handle and platform-style finger rest produces an instrument that the operator can hold for hours of surgery without hand fatigue. The smooth-jaw variant grasps tissue without leaving the tooth-mark scars a 1×2 toothed forceps produces — useful for grasping mucosa, peritoneum, dura and any tissue that will not be closed primarily but must be retracted or held while another instrument works alongside.
Build
Forged AISI 410 stainless steel, mirror-polished, spring-action handle. The standard pattern; specific length variants follow.





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