Surgical Instrument Washer Racks for cleaning cannulated surgical instruments inside and out eliminate hand washing surgical instruments and lower surgical instrument cleaning costs.
Surgical Instrument Washers boost productivity.
The purpose of a surgical instrument washer is to deliver surgical instruments that are "clean and safe to handle" for reprocessing and surgical instruments that are clean so that they can be sterilized. Surgical instruments that are not clean cannot be sterilized. Surgical Instrument Washers properly prepare surgical instruments for sterilization by Terminal Sterilizers. Clean is the "Prerequisite for Sterilization".
The "Proper Sequence of Surgical Instrument Washer Treatments"
includes a series of mechanical and chemical treatments.
The mechanical surgical instrument washer treatments include:
- cold water surgical instrument pre-wash,
- ultrasonic surgical instrument cleaning,
The chemical surgical instrument washer treatments include:
- surgical instrument enzyme cleaners,
- surgical instrument washer detergents,
- surgical instrument surface conditioners,
- and surgical instrument lubricants.
Countertop Surgical Instrument Washers
Tabletop Surgical Instrument Washers
Undercounter Surgical Instrument Washers
Gentle Surgical Instrument Washers perform the proper sequence of treatments: pre-wash, ultrasonic (optional), surgical instrument cleaner detergent washing, purified water elevated temperature rinsing, lubrication and high temperature drying.
The Washington University School of Medicine at Washington University Medical Center tested Surgical Instrument Washers for their ability to complete remove pathological organism from surgical instruments. click here for study.
Automated Surgical Instrument Washers can safely contain within their chambers the cleaning-decontamination-reprocessing functions, removal of debris, and contaminated aerosols. click here for study.

Surgical Instrument Washers with Gentle Cycles
Gentle Surgical Instrument Washer cycles can safely contain surgical instrument cleaning and conditioning functions, the removal of debris, and the contaminated aerosols. Click here for study.
Gentle Surgical Instrument Washer cycles are ideal for cleaning eye surgical instruments and cannulas inside and out.







Summary: It is a recognized risk of exposure to unidentified microorganisms that reprocessing personal endure during the decontamination, reprocessing, and cleaning of surgical instruments. Our goal is to minimize the amount and degree of reprocessing personal exposure to this risk and provide reprocessed surgical instruments that are clean: safe to handle, safe for patient care, are cleaned, reprocessed at the lowest cost. Optimal decontamination cleaning-reprocessing of surgical instruments will secure the prerequisite for disinfecting surgical instruments and/or sterilizing surgical instruments. Typically, Healthcare Facilities manually clean hand-wash surgical instruments: with dried on or excessive debris, surgical instruments that are cannulated, surgical instruments with working channels and/or surgical instruments with lumens. Healthcare Facilities also manually clean hand-wash surgical instruments, when a surgical instrument washer decontaminators or washer disinfectors is not available. Hand washing surgical instruments places the reprocessing personnel at risk. In the decontamination area, surgical instruments are received that are contaminated with variable amounts of debris and unidentified microorganisms. In the Clean Side reprocessing area, surgical instruments requiring further reprocessing are handled by unprotected reprocessing personnel.
CLEANING SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS BY HAND CAN LEAD TO INJURY AND INCREASED EXPOSURE TO HERPATITIS.1 T HE CDC BELIEVES THAT AS MANY AS 18,000 HEALTH CARE WORKERS PER YEAR MAY BE INFECTED BY THE HBV,” AND “AS MANY AS 300 DEATHS MAY RESULT ANNUALLY.”2
Contact us for product information targeted towards improving worker safety.




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Statim 5000 Tabletop Sterilizer








Summary: It is a recognized risk of exposure to unidentified microorganisms that reprocessing personal endure during the decontamination, reprocessing, and cleaning of surgical instruments. Our goal is to minimize the amount and degree of reprocessing personal exposure to this risk and provide reprocessed surgical instruments that are clean: safe to handle, safe for patient care, are cleaned, reprocessed at the lowest cost. Optimal decontamination cleaning-reprocessing of surgical instruments will secure the prerequisite for disinfecting surgical instruments and/or sterilizing surgical instruments.
Typically, Healthcare Facilities manually clean hand-wash surgical instruments: with dried on or excessive debris, surgical instruments that are cannulated, surgical instruments with working channels and/or surgical instruments with lumens. Healthcare Facilities also manually clean hand-wash surgical instruments, when a surgical instrument washer decontaminators or washer disinfectors is not available. Hand washing surgical instruments places the reprocessing personnel at risk. In the decontamination area, surgical instruments are received that are contaminated with variable amounts of debris and unidentified microorganisms. In the Clean Side reprocessing area, surgical instruments requiring further reprocessing are handled by unprotected reprocessing personnel.
CLEANING SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS BY HAND CAN LEAD TO INJURY AND INCREASED EXPOSURE TO HERPATITIS.1 T HE CDC BELIEVES THAT AS MANY AS 18,000 HEALTH CARE WORKERS PER YEAR MAY BE INFECTED BY THE HBV,” AND “AS MANY AS 300 DEATHS MAY RESULT ANNUALLY.”2