What makes the Facial Laceration Set different from the standard Laceration Set?
The Facial Laceration Set (ZZ-0683) includes specialized instruments for facial wound repair not found in the standard Minor Laceration Set: a Frazier Skin Hook for atraumatic tissue retraction, two Iris Scissors variants (straight and curved) for precise tissue dissection, two Halstead Mosquito Forceps (straight and curved), and OR Blue towels. The standard Minor Laceration Set (ZZ-0684) uses a single Iris Scissors and no skin hook, reflecting the less precise technique requirements of non-facial laceration repair.
Does the Sterile Facial Laceration Set include sutures?
No. The NAR Sterile Facial Laceration (Minor) Set (ZZ-0683) includes instruments, draping, and gauze but does not include sutures. Facial lacerations typically require fine suture materials (5-0 or 6-0 nylon or prolene for skin, absorbable sutures for subcutaneous layers); these should be sourced separately and staged alongside the kit. The NAR R-SICK surgical instrument kit includes a selection of suture materials for more complex procedures.
How long is the shelf life of the Sterile Facial Laceration Set?
The NAR Sterile Facial Laceration (Minor) Set has a 3-year shelf life from the date of manufacture. The peel-to-open sterile pouch packaging maintains instrument sterility throughout this period when stored under appropriate conditions (temperature-controlled, dry storage away from direct sunlight). The 3-year shelf life supports long-term pre-staging in forward aid stations, surgical kits, and remote medical facilities.
What is a Frazier Skin Hook used for?
The Frazier Skin Hook is a fine, single-tine surgical hook used to retract and manipulate facial skin edges during wound closure without the crushing force of forceps. Facial skin is thin and highly vascularized, and forceps can cause additional tissue trauma and bruising. The skin hook provides gentle traction and exposure of the wound edge for precise suture placement, which is important for optimal cosmetic outcomes in facial laceration repair.
Can the Facial Laceration Set be used by non-physicians in austere environments?
The Facial Laceration Set contains surgical instruments appropriate for trained medical providers — the scope of practice for facial laceration repair depends on the provider's training and certification level. Physician assistants, nurse practitioners, advanced practice nurses, and military Special Operations medics with appropriate training and scope may use these instruments under field conditions. As with all surgical instruments, training and credentialing for the specific procedure being performed governs appropriate use.
Is the Sterile Facial Laceration Minor Set CoTCCC-recommended?
Wound closure is addressed in the TCCC MARCH protocol under C (Circulation) and prolonged field care guidelines. Minor wound closure is within the scope of TCCC medic-level providers; the Facial Laceration Minor Set provides sterile, purpose-organized components for this intervention.
What training is required to use the Sterile Facial Laceration Minor Set?
Wound closure (closure strips, sutures) is a medic-level skill — 68W, IDC, EMT, or equivalent. Facial lacerations additionally require the provider to rule out underlying injuries before closure; this assessment requires clinical training beyond basic CLS.
What components are in the Sterile Facial Laceration Minor Set?
Verify the current contents list in the product listing. Typical components include sterile irrigation syringe, wound closure strips, gloves, dressing, and antiseptic prep materials. The set is organized for a complete minor laceration closure procedure.
What is the NSN or procurement path for the Facial Laceration Minor Set?
Available through MED-TAC International directly. Agency and DoD procurement can contact NAR for current NSN and GSA contract status.
Can the Facial Laceration Minor Set be used for non-facial lacerations?
Yes. The components in the Facial Laceration Minor Set can be applied to minor lacerations on other body parts. The 'facial' designation indicates the set is sized and configured for the smaller closure requirements typical of facial wounds; for larger lacerations, a larger wound closure set may be required.