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Monocryl is a synthetic, absorbable suture manufactured in Cornelia, Georgia, USA, and trademarked by Ethicon. It is composed of poliglecaprone 25, which is a copolymer of glycolide and epsilon-caprolactone. [1] It comes both dyed (violet) and undyed (clear) and is an absorbable monofilament suture.
Chromic is absorbed by enzymatic degradation. Note – catgut is no longer used in the UK for human surgery. [citation needed] A synthetic adsorbable suture material. Braided synthetic adsorbable multifilament made of polyglycolic acid and coated with N-laurin and L-lysine, which render the thread extremely smooth, soft and knot safe.
A surgical suture, also known as a stitch or stitches, is a medical device used to hold body tissues together and approximate wound edges after an injury or surgery. . Application generally involves using a needle with an attached length
The 76.5 mm L/50 was produced by the Škoda Works in Plzeň.It was designed to replace an assortment of earlier Austro-Hungarian anti-aircraft guns that were in Czech use. . Photos of the gun indicate that it had a box trail, a single unsprung axle, two spoked wheels, two recoil cylinders beneath the barrel and a muzzle brake
The 5 cm KwK 38 L/42 (5 cm Kampfwagenkanone 38 L/42) was a German 50 mm 42 calibre cannon used as the main armament of variants of the German Panzer III medium tank during the Second World War. The towed anti-tank gun equivalent was the PaK.37 of which 2,600 were produced from 1937 until 1940.
The 5 cm SK L/40 gun was primarily used as an anti-torpedo boat gun aboard avisos, corvettes, gunboats, protected cruisers, submarines, torpedo boats, and unprotected cruisers. It was used by the navies of the German Empire, Nazi Germany, Belgium, and The Netherlands. Ship classes that carried the 5 cm SK L/40 include: A-class torpedo boats
Kh-25 being mounted on a Russian Su-24 at Khmeimim air base for use against Syrian insurgent targets. The Kh-25/Kh-25M (Russian: Х-25; NATO: AS-10 'Karen ') is a family of Soviet lightweight air-to-ground missiles with a modular range of guidance systems and a range of 10 km. [1] The anti-radiation variant (Kh-25MP) is known to NATO as the AS-12 'Kegler ' and has a range up to 40 km. [2 ...
The 35.5 cm MRK L/25, which had already been tested the previous year, was also present as were a range of smaller guns. The takeaway of the tests was that the 40 cm gun could penetrate the heaviest ship armor, i.e. two layers of 30.5 cm each at 5,000 m. As the 35.5 cm L/25 could handle 'only' 45–50 cm at 2,000 m, Krupp had made its point.