A NOVEL DISPOSABLE DEVICE FOR MALE CHILDREN CIRCUMCISION
Circumplast is the safest disposable circumcision device for male newborns, babies, and children. We are the sole distributor in the UK and supply all over the world. Emboss Medical, based in London, UK, has developed this new circumcision device called Circumplast®. The feedback we have received from doctors in London, Luton, Cambridge, Derby, and Manchester is a testament to this. Please try our product in your clinic. We are sure that you will be satisfied with the results. Circumplast device is better than Plastibell.
The Circumplast device is a single-use sterile circumcision device
made from plastic and has a ligature. The Circumplast
device is sterilised using Ethylene Oxide and is currently available
in four sizes: 9.5 mm, 11 mm, 12 mm and 13 mm. The size indicates the inner diameter of the device, which is inserted
over the glans of the penis. The price of the Circumplast device is less than that of Plastibell.
£20 discounted from each box (25 Units) in 2024
Features of Circumplast for Circumcision
The glans the penis is kept completely safe throughout the entire procedure. This helps to prevent direct contact between the external meatal opening and modern-day nappies, which could prevent meatal stenosis.
Circumplast is unique in its ability to allow for multiple locations. This innovative design allows the surgeon to simply choose the amount of foreskin to be removed by securing the ligature at any desired location.
The proximal tip of the device helps to cut the inner mucosal skin very close to the coronal groove, which also prevents future adhesion of inner mucosal skin to the glans of the penis and gives a better cosmetic appearance.
The handle of the Circumplast is designed to ensure the surgeon can see the glans. The proximal lip of the Circumplast is also visible through the skin and provides a visual indicator to ensure the correct positioning of the device. The surgeon can change the ligature's location if it is placed incorrectly or if the amount of inner mucosal membrane secured is insufficient before the cutting of the foreskin. Cleaning the penis post-circumcision is safe, as water can enter the cavity between the Circumplast and the glans. The site of the breakage of the handle is away from the glans penis. Circumplast is better than Plastibell devices; we have stocks available and no stock issues.
There are a lot of low-quality Plastibell devices available in the market.
PROCEDURE
Circumplast® is a sterile single-use circumcision device that is supplied with a ligature. The animation below provides a general overview of the procedure when conducting a circumcision using Circumplast®. Circumplast is the safest method for circumcision for babies and young children.
Mark the level at which the circumcision is to occur. A local anaesthetic is used at this time in infants and younger children.
• Gently separate the foreskin from the glans
• Ligate or electrocoagulation of the frenulum vessels to avoid bleeding if required. Retract the foreskin with the frenulum proximally to reveal the glans and allow enough space for the device to be inserted properly.
• Make a dorsal slit long enough to ensure that the Circumplast device can be inserted (Figure 1)
• Insert the Circumplast device until the coronal sulcus has been reached. Fix the foreskin to the distal edge of the Circumplast® device with forceps (Figure 2).
• Secure the ligature found in the Circumplast® packaging at the location of the mark made earlier. Break the Circumplast® handle off once the ligature has been secured tightly (Figure 3).
• Excess foreskin should be cut and electrocoagulation (Figure 4). The device will fall off naturally after several days.
The ligature can be secured along any part of the Circumplast circumcision device, thus adjusting the amount of foreskin removed. The Circumplast circumcision device must be inserted until the coronal sulcus is reached to ensure the device is static upon securing the ligature.
A novel disposable ring (Circumplast) showed no ring migration onto the shaft of the penis in the first 1000 male children's circumcisions in a community specialist clinic.
Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports: Volume 92, May 2023, 102603 (published evidence)