Fergusson-Ackland Mouth Gag — British Combined Pattern
The Fergusson-Ackland combines Sir William Fergusson’s mid-nineteenth-century mouth-gag design with Henry Ackland’s later refinement into a hybrid with the gentle opening curve of the Fergusson and the rapid release of the Ackland. The combined design was promoted by the Royal College of Surgeons of England as the standard British mouth gag for the cleft-palate repair procedures that defined the discipline in the 1880s.
The cleft-palate repair fit
Cleft-palate repair requires the surgeon to work in the posterior oropharynx for a prolonged operation (1-2 hours), with the airway shared with the anaesthetist who has the patient under general anaesthesia. The Fergusson-Ackland gives the wide aperture for the surgeon and the rapid-release mechanism for the anaesthetist to clear the airway quickly if needed during the operation. The combination matters because both requirements have to be met simultaneously.
Modern paediatric cleft surgery
Modern cleft-palate repair uses the Dingman retractor (covered in this batch) for the primary mouth-opening; the Fergusson-Ackland survives in older operating-room kits and is the right alternative when the Dingman is unavailable.





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