Standard Kocher 20cm 2×3 Teeth Tissue Forceps
The 20cm Kocher with 2×3 teeth is the heaviest tooth configuration of the Kocher pattern — two teeth opposing three teeth across the jaw, producing maximum grip on the densest tissues encountered in surgery. The 2×3 teeth pattern handles cartilage during costochondral approach to thoracotomy, dense scar tissue during revision operations, and the toughened mesh-and-tissue composite that develops at sites of previous prosthetic-mesh hernia repair.
The tooth-count progression
Standard Kocher tooth configurations span 1×2 (general fascia closure), 2×3 (dense tissue), and rare 3×4 (heavy industrial use rarely encountered in surgery). The 2×3 variant fills the indication where the standard 1×2 cannot reliably grip — typically post-surgical scarred tissues that fibrosis has converted from normal flexibility to dense rigidity.
The revision-surgery context
Revision abdominal-wall surgery (re-do hernia repair, abdominal-wall reconstruction after dehiscence, mesh-removal procedures) encounters scarred tissue that breaks regular forceps. The 2×3 Kocher provides the heavy grip these procedures require; the 20cm length keeps the surgeon’s hand outside the wound during the scarred-tissue dissection.





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