DeBakey Straight Atraumatic Tissue Forceps
Michael Ellis DeBakey (1908-2008), Houston Methodist Hospital cardiovascular surgeon and one of the most influential surgeons of the twentieth century, designed his atraumatic forceps with parallel ridges across the jaw faces — a pattern that grips vascular tissue securely without producing the intimal damage that tooth-marked forceps cause. The DeBakey forceps is the universal vascular-surgery tissue handler and has become the iconic instrument of cardiovascular and aortic surgery.
The parallel-ridge engineering principle
Vascular tissue requires grip that holds without intimal injury — both intimal damage (from sharp teeth) and crushing (from heavy smooth jaws) accelerate post-operative thrombosis and graft failure. DeBakey’s parallel-ridge pattern multiplies the friction coefficient against vessel adventitia without producing point-load injury. The ridges face each other across the closed jaw, gripping tissue between them as if between two textured combs.
DeBakey’s surgical legacy
DeBakey performed the first carotid endarterectomy (1953), the first endovascular aneurysm repair concept (1958), and over 60,000 cardiovascular operations across a 70-year career. The forceps that bears his name is in routine use at every cardiovascular surgical centre worldwide and has become standard issue across all surgical specialties for atraumatic tissue handling.





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