Derma Cath Strip Reclosable Catheter Fastener
SKU: 42112437016

Derma Cath Strip Reclosable Catheter Fastener

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Description

Derma Cath Strip Reclosable Catheter FastenerDerma Cath Strip Reclosable Catheter Fastener SKU: CS50 Reclosable Tube Fastener Dynamic Flexible Adhesion Minimizes Skin Shear & Tension Injury Urinary, GT JT, Wound Drain, Central Line & IV Compatible Latex Free A reclosable adhesive fastener strip for securing catheters, feeding tubes, wound drains, and IV lines at the skin exit site. The flexible material with dynamic adherence maintains secure tube positioning through patient movement, bending,

Derma Cath Strip Reclosable Catheter Fastener

SKU: CS50

Reclosable Tube Fastener  |  Dynamic Flexible Adhesion  |  Minimizes Skin Shear & Tension Injury  |  Urinary, GT/JT, Wound Drain, Central Line & IV Compatible  |  Latex Free

A reclosable adhesive fastener strip for securing catheters, feeding tubes, wound drains, and IV lines at the skin exit site. The flexible material with dynamic adherence maintains secure tube positioning through patient movement, bending, and position changes — without the rigid pull that causes tube-site complications. Minimizes the skin shear, blistering, and irritation that occur when tubes are inadequately secured. The reclosable design allows the tube to be temporarily repositioned or accessed without removing the adhesive base from the skin. Compatible with urinary catheters, gastrostomy tubes, jejunostomy tubes, wound drainage systems, central line catheters, and multi-port IVs. Latex free. By Dumex/Derma Sciences (Integra LifeSciences). 50/pack.


Order by Part Number

SKU Description Quantity Options
CS50 Reclosable catheter fastener strip 50/Pack

Compatible with multiple tube types — confirm sizing and application technique for specific tube type with clinical team. Questions? 1-866-218-0902


Tube Type Compatibility

  • Urinary catheters (Foley, suprapubic, external)
  • Gastrostomy tubes (GT) — abdominal feeding tube exit sites
  • Jejunostomy tubes (JT) — jejunal feeding tube exit sites
  • Wound drainage systems — surgical drain tubes and bulb drain tubing
  • Central line catheters — PICC lines, tunneled catheters, central venous lines
  • Multi-port IVs and peripheral IV lines

Key Features

  • Reclosable fastener — the fastening mechanism opens and closes to allow temporary tube access or repositioning without removing the adhesive base from the skin
  • Dynamic adherence — adhesive maintains skin bond through patient movement, repositioning, and normal daily activity rather than peeling away at the edges during motion
  • Flexible material — moves with the skin and body rather than creating a rigid anchor point that concentrates tension stress at the exit site
  • Minimizes skin shear — reduces the mechanical drag and pull on skin at the tube exit site that causes shear injury, blistering, and irritation with extended wear
  • Reduces tube traction — by anchoring the tube away from the exit site, redirects accidental pull force from the exit site to the fastener
  • Multiple tube type compatibility — one SKU for urinary, enteral, drainage, and vascular access tube securement
  • Single-use per application
  • Latex free

Clinical FAQs

What is a catheter securement device and why is it clinically important?

A catheter or tube securement device is an adhesive fastener that anchors a catheter or tube to the skin near its exit site — preventing the tube from moving, pulling, or being accidentally dislodged by patient activity. Without securement, any tension applied to the tube (from patient movement, tubing weight, or accidental catching) is transmitted directly to the exit site, where it creates mechanical forces against the skin and the tube tract. Over time this produces skin shear injury (the skin surface is dragged sideways by friction forces), blistering at the adhesive margins of any tape used in its place, granulation tissue at tube-insertion sites, and in the worst cases, tube dislodgement — which is particularly serious for feeding tubes, central lines, and urinary catheters that require clinical replacement. A purpose-designed securement device like the Derma Cath Strip distributes and absorbs tube tension through the adhesive platform rather than concentrating it at the tube exit.

What does "reclosable" mean and when would I need to reopen the fastener?

A reclosable fastener has a closure mechanism (typically a hook-and-loop or fold-over locking strip) that can be opened and re-secured without removing the adhesive base from the skin. This is clinically useful in several situations. For urinary catheter users, the fastener may need to be opened to allow tube rotation — periodically rotating the catheter slightly at the fastener point reduces pressure point formation at the exit site. For enteral feeding tubes, the fastener may be briefly opened to allow slight position adjustment when the tube has migrated, before re-securing. For wound drainage systems, the fastener may be opened during dressing changes when the drain site is assessed. In all cases, the adhesive base remains on the skin during these adjustments — avoiding the skin trauma and adhesive strip consumption that would result from full removal and reapplication each time tube access is needed.

Why use a purpose-designed securement strip rather than standard medical tape?

Standard medical tape adheres flat against the skin and creates a fixed adhesion bond — there is no built-in mechanism to accommodate tube movement or to open and reclose. When a tube moves and standard tape does not move with it, the tape edges peel away from the skin and the adhesion fails progressively. Repeated tape application over the same skin area — the typical workaround — compounds skin stripping and irritation with each removal. Standard tape also cannot be opened to access or reposition the tube without tearing and replacing it. The Derma Cath Strip's flexible dynamic adherence, reclosable mechanism, and design that keeps tube tension away from the skin address these limitations specifically. For long-term tube management over days to weeks — feeding tubes, urinary catheters, wound drains — a purpose-designed securement device provides more reliable tube stability and better skin outcomes than tape alone.


Questions about catheter securement, tube type compatibility, or institutional supply orders? Call our product specialists: 1-866-218-0902

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SKU: 42112437016

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Adam
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Cool design and good customer service
Item Package Quantity: 1, Size: 4 Tiers 24 Inch, Item Package Quantity: 1, Size: 4 Tiers 24 Inch
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Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2026
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Becky J.
Birmingham, US
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Good shelves
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Unit was pretty easy to assemble. Shelves are sturdy and no scratches or dings. My only complaint is that there is paint missing here and there on the black pipe. We covered those spots with magic marker. I would buy it again!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2025
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David Hollifield
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
An excellent collection of essays
Format: Paperback
An excellent collection of essays. A few of which deserve a brief note. As someone from within the Reformed tradition, I particularly appreciated the chapters on Calvin and the missional impulse of the Reformed branch of the Reformation (Chapters 4, 5, and 6). Karen Spiecker Stetina’s chapter on Calvin’s Geneva as a virtual mission training center to launch missionaries around Europe and elsewhere was not only enlightening but instructive. The chapter detailing the Reformed mission to Brazil (chapter 6)–while the mission itself was underwhelming in its achievements–was especially intriguing. These chapters thoroughly undue the misconception of Calvin and his followers as missionally indifferent. Turning to the Catholic portion of the essays (the book is split into two portions, one detailing Protestant mission in the 16th century, and the other, Catholic mission during that period), one will find essays dealing with spirituality surrounding missions (chapters 10 and 13), the intersection of missions and colonialism (chapters 12, 14, and 15), and the issue of accommodation in mission (chapter 11). All of which are exceptional. As someone who has spent time practicing and studying mission on the continent of Africa, I found John Thornton’s chapter on the Jesuit mission to Kongo in this section to be particularly insightful. This is partly due to the nature of the mission itself. As Thornton points out, the mission was not to evangelize but to “reform a new but vibrant Catholic Church” in Kongo (265). This chapter has much to teach contemporary mission practitioners in Subsaharan Africa as the situation is largely the same for missionaries there today: one of building up rather than evangelizing. What’s more the mission failed after only a 7 year stent. There is much here for missionaries to evangelized lands/peoples today to sit with and learn from. But perhaps the greatest benefit of the book is an expansion of an understanding of mission. Rather than viewing mission narrowly as moving to a foreign land, the essays (particularly in the Protestant section of the book), as Smither notes in the introduction, “allow Luther, Calvin, Ignatius of Loyola, Teresa of Avila, and others to define mission on their terms and through their practice” (1). One must read the book to come a full scope of how they did so; but it ranges from being light in dark places through the preaching of the true Gospel, to church planting, to the creation of training centers just to name a few (and those are just from a single chapter!). Gallagher and Smither’s Sixteenth Century Mission is an excellent contribution to the study of Christian world missions especially as it deals with an era typically thought to be devoid of what we today understand that phrase to entail. Disclaimer: I received this book for free from Lexham Press in exchange for an honest and thorough review. I was not required to write a positive review
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Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2021
E
Erik
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Somewhat niche but a treasure-trove nonetheless!
Format: Paperback
A somewhat niche topic but a small treasure-trove of a book nonetheless! Definitely something I would recommend to anyone thinking seriously about and planning on studying mission. More than just a descriptive history book, the various essays focus on what can be drawn and learned from particular figures and movements. I picked the book because I knew next to nothing about 16th century missions (and not very much about Protestant or Roman Catholic missions in general) and thought it would be good to fill in some of my knowledge gaps. I was not disappointed! There are essays on people I never even heard of before, and now wish I could know so much more! Who knew there was a Czech theologian (Jan Hus) who wrote a devotional for women in the early 1400s? I certainly didn’t. Also, the very first essay I found to be a healthy challenge to Gustav Warnack’s conceptualization of mission (that ...“it must be a systematic work, preferable by an institution outside the church that consistently sends missionaries to previously unevangelized areas.” (p.12)) and his critique of early Reformation missional work (namely that there was none). Plus, while I had heard that Calvin had sent some missionaries to Brazil, I never knew there was so much drama with Villegagnon behind it all! The whole ordeal and everything leading up to it sounds like it would make for pretty crazy reality show or a great movie. The book touches on missions to a variety of locations, Kongo, China, Brazil, Latin America, and Europe itself, and is especially helpful in understanding the origins and philosophies of Reformed, Anabaptist, Jesuit, and Franciscan missiologies. It also gives light to the many complexities of mission work, dealing with politics, economy, culture, competing religion, and language barriers. Not all of the essays are created equal but I definitely got something from each one. Also, as a small disclaimer, the book may be a bit more of a laborious read for some. It deals with a great many events, places, and names that may be unfamiliar to someone not studied in Christian missional work (like myself). But working through such things can yield some ripe fruit. Being a collection of essays around a particular topic, it is a great book to pick up and set down again, not requiring large chunks of time to work through. In fact, it may be better read in several small intervals, one chapter per sitting, to properly digest each essays significance. I received this book for free from Lexham Press in exchange for an honest review, whether negative or positive. The views of this expressed in this review are entirely my own.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2021
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Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Sturdy…quality finish
Color: Black
Super sturdy ..high quality metal
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2026

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