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PEAK SURGICAL

Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set for 1.5mm to 6mm Atraumatic Extraction

Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set for 1.5mm to 6mm Atraumatic Extraction

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SKU:PS-DLWES-00245

Regular price $71.50 USD
Regular price Sale price $71.50 USD
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  • Medical Grade Steel Reusable.
  • CE-CertificateCE Certified
  • FDA-CertificateFDA Certified
  • iso-certificateISO Certified
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The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set from Peak Surgicals (SKU: PS-DLWES-00245) is a reusable German Stainless Steel dental extraction set designed for periodontal ligament severance, controlled tooth luxation, socket expansion, root elevation, and atraumatic exodontia. This set includes six winged short-handle elevators labeled 1.5mm, 2mm, 3mm, 4mm, 5mm, and 6mm, with the complete set priced at $71.50. The visible design includes color-coded ergonomic handles, winged working tips, concave blade faces, sharpened apical edges, narrow shanks, tapered necks, and smooth stainless steel transition zones for precise insertion into the periodontal ligament space. Oral surgeons, general dentists, periodontists, implant clinicians, hospital dental departments, outpatient dental clinics, ambulatory oral surgery centers, and procurement teams use this set during simple extraction, surgical extraction, retained root removal, premolar extraction, molar luxation, implant site preservation, periodontal ligament release, flapless extraction, orthodontic extraction, and socket-conservative tooth removal. The progressive 1.5mm to 6mm blade range allows controlled transition from fine ligament entry to wider root surface engagement.

Winged Blade Geometry, Concave Working Face, Short Handle, and Apical Cutting Edge

The winged elevator pattern uses a flattened blade with lateral shoulders that improve control during insertion between the root surface and alveolar socket wall. The concave working face follows the convex contour of a tooth root, allowing the cutting edge to enter the periodontal ligament space rather than forcing broad pressure against cortical bone. The sharpened apical edge is used to sever ligament fibers along the cervical, middle, and apical root thirds before conventional forceps delivery. The tapered shank keeps the working tip visible around the gingival margin, interdental septum, and socket entrance. The short handle gives direct tactile feedback during rotational, apical, and lateral movements, which is important when working around thin buccal plate, curved roots, furcation anatomy, and fragile interproximal bone. The color-coded handles identify size during tray setup and procedure sequencing. This instrument has no hinge, ratchet, or spring because clinical control comes from hand pressure, blade orientation, root anatomy, and progressive elevator selection.

Simple Extraction, Surgical Extraction, Root Removal, and Socket Preservation Workflow

During simple extraction, the smallest elevator is introduced into the periodontal ligament space after gingival cuff separation, then advanced apically with controlled pressure to release ligament fibers and widen the socket. In surgical extraction, the elevator works after flap reflection or bone removal to mobilize root segments before forceps placement. During retained root removal, the fine 1.5mm and 2mm tips enter narrow root-socket interfaces where broad elevators cannot engage without damaging interradicular bone. In premolar extraction, the 3mm and 4mm sizes help luxate single-rooted teeth while preserving buccal and lingual plates for grafting or implant planning. In molar extraction, the 5mm and 6mm instruments provide broader root surface contact after initial ligament release and root sectioning. During socket preservation, the set supports controlled displacement of the tooth from the periodontal ligament space instead of crushing the socket wall. The elevators work beside periosteal elevators, forceps, root tip picks, luxators, elevators, suction, curettes, and needle holders in oral surgery workflow.

1.5mm, 2mm, 3mm, 4mm, 5mm, and 6mm Clinical Size Selection

The 1.5mm elevator is selected for initial ligament entry, narrow anterior roots, retained apical fragments, and tight periodontal spaces where the blade must enter without widening the gingival access excessively. The 2mm size supports fine luxation around incisors, canines, premolars, and fractured roots after the first ligament release. The 3mm instrument provides a balanced working width for routine anterior and premolar extraction where more root contact is needed while still preserving tactile precision. The 4mm blade is selected when the root surface offers wider purchase, including premolars, small molars, and sectioned molar roots. The 5mm elevator provides stronger contact along broader root walls and socket margins during posterior extraction. The 6mm size is used after the ligament has been released and the socket has started to expand, giving the clinician a broader surface for molar luxation, root segment delivery, and final mobilization before forceps extraction. The sequence supports stepwise enlargement rather than uncontrolled levering.

German Stainless Steel, Color-Coded Handles, Sterilization, and Procurement Documentation

German Stainless Steel gives the Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set the rigidity, corrosion resistance, and reusable durability required for repeated dental extraction procedures. A luxating elevator must retain blade sharpness, tip symmetry, shank alignment, handle stability, and smooth transition geometry because distortion affects periodontal ligament access and root surface control. The color-coded handles support rapid size recognition during extraction sequencing, especially when the clinician changes from 1.5mm to wider instruments during the same procedure. After clinical use, each elevator is decontaminated, the blade edge is brushed, the concave working face is cleaned, the handle grooves are cleared, and the transition neck is inspected before steam sterilization by autoclave after complete drying. CE marking, ISO-13485 certification, and FDA compliance support dental clinic purchasing, hospital procurement, distributor documentation, and international tender files. The listed price, reusable format, six-size configuration, MOQ of 1 set, and return-and-replacement service support standardized oral surgery instrument tray planning.

SKU PS-DLWES-00245
Product Name Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set
Price $71.50 per set
Size/Gauge Variants 1.5mm, 2mm, 3mm, 4mm, 5mm, 6mm winged luxating elevators
Instrument Category Dental Instruments / Luxation Elevators / Winged Elevator Set
Procedure Simple Extraction, Surgical Extraction, Periodontal Ligament Severance, Retained Root Removal, Premolar Extraction, Molar Luxation, Implant Site Preservation, Socket-Conservative Tooth Removal
Material German Stainless Steel
Finish Polished stainless steel working ends with color-coded ergonomic handles
Sterilization Steam sterilizable / Autoclave compatible after cleaning and drying
Instrument Classification Class I reusable dental extraction instrument set
Reusable Yes
Certifications CE, ISO-13485, FDA
Warranty 1 Year
MOQ 1 Set
OEM / Custom Orders Available
After-Sale Service Return and Replacement

How does the Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set compare with a conventional Coupland elevator?
The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set is designed for periodontal ligament cutting and socket-conservative tooth luxation. A Coupland elevator has a broader straight blade used mainly for elevation, levering, and root mobilization after access has been created. The winged luxating pattern enters the ligament space more precisely because the blade is thinner, sharper, and shaped for root-surface contact. Coupland elevators are useful for stronger elevation and root delivery, but they concentrate more leverage against alveolar bone. The winged elevator set is selected when the clinical goal is controlled ligament severance before forceps delivery. Its 1.5mm to 6mm sequence allows the dentist to begin with fine entry and progress to broader root contact. Oral surgery trays benefit from both patterns because ligament cutting and gross elevation are different extraction steps.

Which size is selected during anterior, premolar, and molar extraction?
The 1.5mm size is selected for tight periodontal spaces, anterior roots, narrow retained fragments, and first-entry ligament severance. The 2mm size extends controlled access around incisors, canines, premolars, and fractured root interfaces. The 3mm blade is used when a wider root surface is available but fine tactile control remains important. The 4mm size supports premolar and small molar luxation after the ligament space has been opened. The 5mm and 6mm instruments are selected for posterior teeth, sectioned molar roots, broad socket walls, and final mobilization before forceps delivery. The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set allows a stepwise extraction sequence instead of forcing one blade width into every socket. This size range supports socket preservation, implant site planning, and controlled oral surgery workflow.

What do CE, ISO 13485, and FDA compliance mean for dental procurement?
CE marking supports conformity documentation for dental clinics, hospitals, distributors, and procurement teams sourcing reusable dental extraction instruments. ISO 13485 indicates that manufacturing is managed under a medical device quality management system with controlled production, inspection, and traceability. FDA compliance supports procurement records for buyers sourcing reusable dental devices for regulated healthcare markets. The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set fits purchasing categories for non-powered dental extraction and oral surgery instruments. These credentials help procurement officers compare the set against tender requirements, internal purchasing rules, and distributor documentation needs. German Stainless Steel construction, reusable format, 1-year warranty, MOQ of 1 set, and return-and-replacement service support repeat ordering. For oral surgery departments and dental clinics, the documentation aligns atraumatic extraction function with regulated sourcing expectations.

How is the winged luxating blade controlled during tooth elevation?
The blade is placed into the periodontal ligament space with the concave face oriented toward the root surface. The clinician advances the tip apically with controlled pressure, then uses small rotational and lateral movements to sever ligament fibers and expand the socket. The winged shoulder helps maintain stable contact and reduces uncontrolled slippage during root-surface tracking. The smallest size is used first when the ligament space is tight, then wider blades are introduced as mobility increases. The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set does not use a hinge, ratchet, or spring because the instrument depends on direct hand control. The short handle transmits tactile resistance from the blade to the operator’s fingers. This mechanism supports controlled extraction, root delivery, and socket preservation.

How should the Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set be cleaned and sterilized after use?
After use, each elevator is decontaminated promptly so blood, saliva, bone particles, periodontal tissue, irrigant, or root debris does not dry on the blade, shank, handle grooves, or size marking. The winged blade and concave working face are brushed carefully because debris can remain near the sharpened tip and lateral shoulders. The handle grooves are cleaned so grip control remains stable during the next procedure. Each tip is inspected for edge integrity, symmetry, and alignment before packaging. German Stainless Steel supports steam sterilization by autoclave after complete cleaning and drying. The Dental Luxating Winged Elevator Set should return to the oral surgery tray only after all six sizes are visually clean, sharp, aligned, and arranged in sequence. Proper reprocessing preserves tactile control, ligament cutting performance, and repeated clinical usability.