La Force Adenoid Curette — Buffalo Self-Retaining Guillotine
Stuart La Force, Buffalo ENT surgeon, designed his adenoid curette in 1916 as a self-retaining guillotine with a captive blade — the curette engaged the adenoid pad, the operator pressed a lever, and the captive blade slid forward to slice the adenoid free at the same moment the cup-bowl held the tissue. The result was a complete adenoidectomy in a single coordinated motion, with the adenoid specimen captured for delivery rather than spat into the airway.
The captive-specimen advantage
The major immediate complication of paediatric adenoidectomy is aspiration of the avulsed adenoid tissue — fragments can fall into the airway during the procedure or in the immediate post-operative period. The La Force’s captive blade traps the specimen inside the curette body until the operator deliberately ejects it; this design effectively eliminates the aspiration risk that older curettes carry.
Modern survival
The La Force has been displaced in most modern teaching hospitals by powered-microdebrider adenoidectomy, but it remains the safest cold-instrument adenoid technique and is the right tool for resource-limited settings and for surgeons who want the captive-specimen safety feature.





Reviews
There are no reviews yet.