What's the difference between forceps and pincers?

Forceps


Definition:

  • (n.) A pair of pinchers, or tongs; an instrument for grasping, holding firmly, or exerting traction upon, bodies which it would be inconvenient or impracticable to seize with the fingers, especially one for delicate operations, as those of watchmakers, surgeons, accoucheurs, dentists, etc.
  • (n.) The caudal forceps-shaped appendage of earwigs and some other insects. See Earwig.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Predisposing factors were coagulopathy and forceps extraction after prolonged labor.
  • (2) Five percent of the forceps biopsies were unsuitable for examination; all excision biopsies were of good quality.
  • (3) Forceps and unassisted deliveries were experienced similarly.
  • (4) The influence of endoscopic forceps variables (size, design, and make) on biopsy specimen weight, depth, and diagnostic adequacy has been studied in vitro on normal human stomach, and in vivo at endoscopy in dog and in patients.
  • (5) Because the larvae of Anisakis can always be observed by endoscopy and removed with biopsy forceps, early performance of endoscopy is highly recommended for patients in whom acute gastric anisakiasis is suspected and for those who have eaten raw fish within 12 hours before onset of the gastric symptoms.
  • (6) Where the standard staple remover is not immediately available, an artery forceps, correctly applied, is just as quick.
  • (7) To our knowledge, it is the first case of hypogammaglobulinaemia with nodular hyperplasia of the small bowel, diagnosed by endoscopy and forceps biopsy.
  • (8) Usherwood's account of the breakage of Palmer's diathermy forceps (June 30, p. 773).
  • (9) At each target point, after opening the dura and using stereotactic coordinates and equipment, a microbiopsy forceps was used to place "micropatties" (each with a string tail) or small catheters with pledgets or catheter tips located at tumor edges.
  • (10) Electronic feedback through the same cables as used for coagulation enabled the use of conventional bipolar cables and forceps.
  • (11) In the beginning special forceps were used to remove the nuclear tissue.
  • (12) In selected cases, fine needle biopsy appears to be preferable to transbronchial forceps biopsy since the risk of a possibly life-threatening pulmonary hemorrhage may be lower.
  • (13) Corneal abrasion occurred in two babies and corneal oedema in one baby after forceps delivery but in none of the control group.
  • (14) The routine in our department for years used to be: prevention of bearing down during the end of the 2nd stage of labor in high myopic parturients, by forceps delivery, with the assumption that this will prevent increased intraocular pressure--thus preventing deterioration or increased damage to the eyes.
  • (15) Stone disintegration with ultrasound is done under direct vision, and the fragments aspirated or removed with the help of forceps or Dormia basket.
  • (16) Forceps biopsy of an endobronchial lesion showed plasmacytoma similar in histologic features to her original osseous lesions.
  • (17) Fiberoptic bronchoscopy is advantageous in that it can be performed quickly and easily, it avoids general anesthesia, and it is more adaptable to foreign body retrieval than the nasopharyngoscope because of its forceps channel, through which varied retrieval instruments can be passed.
  • (18) Twenty horses with no evidence of laryngeal motor deficit were stimulated on 10 sites by touch with the forceps.
  • (19) No relationship was found between neurobehavior and low-forceps extraction, oxytocin augmentation, parity, or duration of labor.
  • (20) Grading by aspiration biopsy is less reliable but may be of benefit in selected cases where forceps biopsy is less suitable.

Pincers


Definition:

  • (n. pl.) See Pinchers.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Because the fossil fuel industry faces a closing pincers.
  • (2) The worrying consequence is that the operating companies may find themselves the victims of an uncomfortable pincer movement.
  • (3) The hypophysis was ablated by catching its rostral end with a pincer.
  • (4) This was consistently shown in all modalities of assessments which included patients' assessments (P < 0.001) and investigator's assessments (P < 0.001) of the percentage change in nodule size, and gross measurements of nodule volumes using a pincer (P < 0.001).
  • (5) To our knowledge, this is the first report of a method of stretching the interdigital skin of syndactyly by means of a pincer.
  • (6) Opposition factions north of Aleppo have been increasingly stuck “between the pincers” of YPG forces on one side and pro-government fighters on the other, a military source said.
  • (7) "News Corp always worked a double pincer, offering fear and favour.
  • (8) In two patients with total loss of all digits, pincer pinch was restored by the transfer of two separate toes, one to each side of the stump.
  • (9) Murphy said Scotland could be “caught in a pincer movement between the leader of the SNP and new leader of the Tory party”.
  • (10) In the heat of battle, Turkish troops and Kurdish fighters turn on one another, fighting their age-old war, though both are supposed to be fighting a common enemy, Islamic State (Isis), advancing on the battered, tortured civilians of Aleppo and other Syrian and Kurdish communities in a murderous pincer movement.
  • (11) With GCSE English, we're still at the draft stage, but we can already see that there is a pincer movement going on.
  • (12) Nine patients who had suffered mutilating injuries of the hand with preservation of only one digit and loss of the others at metacarpal level have been treated by transfer of the second toe onto a metacarpal stump to restore pincer grip.
  • (13) The use of titanium alloys is recommended for making bone-joining members, retracting medical instruments, of the spatula and speculum types, some kinds of non-magnetic pincers and ultrasonic medical instruments.
  • (14) PINCERS may also be used to assist in planning the synthesis of mixed-probe DNA sequences for cross-hybridization experiments.
  • (15) Scores of reporters have been killed – often tortured and decapitated – in what is now seen as a pincer-movement against their work by drug cartels and the state.
  • (16) The greater the extent of pyramidal tract destruction, the longer the time necessary for recovery of both discrete finger movement and pincer grasp, the greater the effort needed to attain recovery of hand function, and the weaker the affected musculature.
  • (17) Dentin thickness was measured using a pincer caliper.
  • (18) In the inflammatory mycoses the author recommends an oral treatment consisting in griseofulvin, and, in case of severe inflammation, prednisone per os at the same time with a local treatment (painting with alcohol iodate 1%, followed by the application of a cream with cortisone associated with an antimicrobial antibiotic and pincer epilation).
  • (19) A goalless first half had been a triumph, not as it turned out, for Argentina’s golden flea, but for Queiroz’s pincer-like squeeze.
  • (20) A problem needing investigation is the principle of cardiomyoplasty (CMP) itself, as the muscle acts more as a lift than as pincers.

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