Incision

A cut made in soft tissue.


A cut made in the body during surgery.


A wound made with a sharp instrument.


A cut in a person’s body made by a surgeon using a scalpel, or any cut made with a sharp knife or razor.


Slit or opening made by cutting, as with a scalpel.


A precise cut made into body tissue with a sterile surgical knife. The incision is made to expose tissue inside the body so that the surgeon can repair or remove a diseased organ. The type, size, and depth of the incision depends on the surgical procedure being performed.


The surgical cutting of soft tissues, such as skin or muscle, with a knife or scalpel.


A cut or wound; a term especially applied to surgical openings.


A cut made with a knife, electrosurgical unit, or laser especially for surgical purposes.


A laceration, commonly associated with the incision performed by a surgeon during a surgical intervention, is a term used to describe a specific type of cut.


An incision refers to a cut created in the body’s tissues with a surgical knife, commonly known as a scalpel. Most of these incisions are made to access internal tissue, generally for the purpose of repairing or extracting a diseased organ. Incisions can also be used to allow pus to drain from conditions like abscesses or boils.


A surgical cut or injury, incisions are identified by their location, form, orientation, the organ or structure they’re made in, and often by the surgeon who first introduced them.


 


Posted

in

by

Tags: