Mucus Extractor

Mucus Extractors are sterile, single-use handheld suction devices designed for the rapid clearance of secretions from the oral cavity, pharynx, and trachea, with distinct configurations for neonatal and adult populations. Neonatal/infant extractors feature soft, flexible, small-diameter tips with low suction capacity (30-60 mL) to minimize trauma to delicate airways. Adult/universal extractors (Yank Auer) are rigid, large-bore, angled devices with multiple suction eyes and high-flow capacity (150-300 mL) for rapid clearance of blood, vomitus, and thick secretions. Select models incorporate sterile specimen traps for collection of respiratory secretions for microbiological analysis. Critical safety requirements include strict limitation of suction duration (≤10 seconds; ≤5 seconds in neonates), avoidance of excessive suction pressure (neonates ≤80 mmHg), use of non-traumatic multiple-eye tips for vulnerable patients, and absolute single-use protocol. An indispensable airway device in neonatal resuscitation, pediatric care, emergency medicine, and perioperative settings.

Suction Catheters

Suction Catheters are sterile, single-use flexible tubes designed for aspiration of pulmonary secretions from the airways of intubated, tracheostomized, or spontaneously breathing patients unable to clear their own secretions. Available in French sizes 5 Fr-18 Fr, with whistle-tip or coude configurations, single or multiple eyelets, and thumb-controlled suction valves. Open suction catheters are single-pass devices requiring strict sterile technique and immediate disposal. Closed (in-line) suction catheters are enclosed in a sterile sheath, permitting suctioning without ventilator disconnection, maintaining PEEP, and reducing aerosolization of pathogens—essential for high-frequency ventilation, ARDS, and airborne precautions. Critical safety parameters include catheter gauge not exceeding one-half the endotracheal tube internal diameter, suction duration ≤15 seconds, and vacuum pressure ≤150 mmHg. Proper technique prevents hypoxemia, mucosal trauma, and ventilator-associated pneumonia.