Theodor Kocher won the Nobel Prize in 1909 for thyroid surgery, and the heavy toothed forceps that bear his name reflect the surgical confidence of a man who pioneered modern thyroidectomy. The defining feature is the 1×2 interlocking teeth at the tip — a firm grip on dense tissue that would slip out of a Crile or Kelly. Kocher forceps grasp fascia, tendon, tough connective tissue, and the abdominal wall during closure. Used incorrectly on delicate tissue, they crush; they are not for vessels or bowel. The 14 cm, 16 cm, and 20 cm lengths cover most applications; the 20 cm is the deep-cavity working length. Modern orthopaedic and vascular trays still rely on Kocher when a sure grip is required.
The Kocher Hemostatic Forceps — 350 mm (35 cm), Pattern 141 (Ref HF 04-141-09) is part of the Fizza Surgical instrument catalogue, manufactured under ISO 13485:2016.
| Reference / SKU | HF 04-141-09 |
| Pattern | Kocher |
| Working length | 350 mm (35 cm) |
| 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 |
- Kocher Hemostatic Forceps — 350 mm (35 cm) (HF 04-140-09)
- Ochsner-Kocher Hemostatic Forceps — 350 mm (35 cm) (HF 04-142-09)
- Ochsner-Kocher Hemostatic Forceps — 350 mm (35 cm), Pattern 143 (HF 04-143-09)
Every instrument is forged, machined, and finished at the Sialkot facility from German-origin stainless billet — austenitic 304 / 316 grades for non-cutting, mucosal-contact, and hollow-ware lines where corrosion resistance is the priority, martensitic 420 / 440 grades for cutting and edge-retention patterns where heat-treatable hardness matters, and 17-4 PH precipitation-hardened stainless for high-load orthopedic and implant-handling applications. Polishing, passivation, and final inspection are performed in-house under documented quality procedures aligned with ISO 13485:2016.






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