The curved jaw improves visibility around tissue edges and around the surgeon’s hand — the standard configuration for most dissection and clamping tasks. Catalogue reference HF 04-76-01.
| Reference / SKU | HF 04-76-01 |
| Pattern | Kelly |
| Working length | 160 mm (16 cm) |
| Shape | Curved |
| Material | AISI 420 martensitic stainless steel |
| Sterilization | Steam autoclave to 134 °C · EtO compatible |
| Quality system | ISO 13485:2016 · CE-marked under EU MDR 2017/745 · FDA establishment-registered |
Howard Atwood Kelly was one of the founding professors of Johns Hopkins alongside Halsted, Osler, and Welch — a gynecological surgeon whose name attaches to the larger hemostatic forceps used across general, gynecological, and urological procedures. The Kelly differs from Halsted-Mosquito and Crile in its longer length (14–18 cm typical) and partially-serrated jaws: the distal half smooth, the proximal half cross-serrated. This combination clamps larger pedicles without slipping while leaving the tip-handled tissue less crushed. Standard during hysterectomy, oophorectomy, and ligation of larger vessels in laparotomy. The Kelly pattern remains nearly unchanged from its turn-of-the-twentieth-century introduction.
- Kelly-Rankin Hemostatic Forceps — Straight, 160 mm (16 cm) (HF 04-75-01)
- Kelly-Fraser Hemostatic Forceps — 185 mm (18.5 cm) (HF 04-235-07)
- Kelly Hemostatic Forceps — Curved, 140 mm (14 cm), Pattern 81 (HF 04-81-01)
Fizza Surgical International has manufactured surgical instruments at its Sialkot, Pakistan facility since 1980 — more than four decades of continuous operation under one family ownership. The factory holds ISO 13485:2016 certification for medical devices and CE marking under EU MDR 2017/745, the regulatory baseline European hospitals and distributors require. FDA establishment registration covers exports to the United States.






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