So, I'm guessing you don't want the heart surgery video and vivisected frog links?
I think you should be fine really if you just leave as is the part where you say that all relevant blood vessels are cut and clamped. Depending how things were removed you've got a few clamps more or less, but that should't have to be a major point, unless you want to have each organ clamped off individually and make a point out of the many clamps used and depending on what you mean by clamps that could be quite a lot of metal! Keep in mind that actual surgical instruments can be quite expensive, so maybe something improvised and smaller was used? (I'm totally getting too much into this...) Clamping would still be reasonable if one wants to avoid a mess, as the blood might no longer be pumped as soon as the heart is cut off from doing so, so no more fountains, but obviously still seepage. (As fas as I know, I'm really just making somewhet educated guesses here, anybody who knows better should feel free to chime in and correct me.)
You wouldn't actually need that many cuts through the skin. One big one from the throat all the way down should suffice, with Y-ends towards top and bottom (like an autopsy?). It depends on how much you care about muscles too (in addition to organs) but the skin would be more "peeled" from the muscles (though a scalpel can be used to do this).
So, you's probably cut through the sternum (needs a saw!) then through the pericardium, sack the heart is in, if you want the heart to be visible, clamp shut the aorta and the pulmonary veins. This way cause of death wouldn't be bleeding though.
The throat, oesophagus, stomach, and intestines are obviously all connected, all the way down to the rectum. The big intestines are atached to the back of the abdominal cavity (as is the pancreas), so there might be some cutting and clamping involved to remove these seperately, though those clamps would be gone, except the topmost and bottommost ones.
The trachea also needs to be detached from the throat, but I wouldn't think there's any need for clamps.
The liver surrounds/is attached to the front of the inferior vena cava, which brings blood back to the heart (ends at the right atrium). And as the vena cava is a big vein it's probably clamped too (above and below the missing piece). (This all depends on how big a mess you want to make...)
If you care: There's three arteries that leave the aorta towards the front. Topmost to the stomach, liver, spleen (it's possible to live without one, but as long as you have it there's a lot of blood in it). Though those organs are probably clamped off seperately, as the clamps are usually where the vessels are cut and they are probably removed seperately. The two bottom ones towards small and large intestine. (Roughly) The kidneys have their own arteries directly from the aorta each.
It is generally worth noting that all blood vessels inside the body are usually surrounded by fatty tissue, that means somewhat attached to their surroundings. It's not hard to get a place loose to clamp and cut, but they don't move around freely like cables.
no subject
I think you should be fine really if you just leave as is the part where you say that all relevant blood vessels are cut and clamped. Depending how things were removed you've got a few clamps more or less, but that should't have to be a major point, unless you want to have each organ clamped off individually and make a point out of the many clamps used and depending on what you mean by clamps that could be quite a lot of metal! Keep in mind that actual surgical instruments can be quite expensive, so maybe something improvised and smaller was used? (I'm totally getting too much into this...) Clamping would still be reasonable if one wants to avoid a mess, as the blood might no longer be pumped as soon as the heart is cut off from doing so, so no more fountains, but obviously still seepage. (As fas as I know, I'm really just making somewhet educated guesses here, anybody who knows better should feel free to chime in and correct me.)
You wouldn't actually need that many cuts through the skin. One big one from the throat all the way down should suffice, with Y-ends towards top and bottom (like an autopsy?). It depends on how much you care about muscles too (in addition to organs) but the skin would be more "peeled" from the muscles (though a scalpel can be used to do this).
So, you's probably cut through the sternum (needs a saw!) then through the pericardium, sack the heart is in, if you want the heart to be visible, clamp shut the aorta and the pulmonary veins. This way cause of death wouldn't be bleeding though.
The throat, oesophagus, stomach, and intestines are obviously all connected, all the way down to the rectum. The big intestines are atached to the back of the abdominal cavity (as is the pancreas), so there might be some cutting and clamping involved to remove these seperately, though those clamps would be gone, except the topmost and bottommost ones.
The trachea also needs to be detached from the throat, but I wouldn't think there's any need for clamps.
The liver surrounds/is attached to the front of the inferior vena cava, which brings blood back to the heart (ends at the right atrium). And as the vena cava is a big vein it's probably clamped too (above and below the missing piece). (This all depends on how big a mess you want to make...)
If you care:
There's three arteries that leave the aorta towards the front. Topmost to the stomach, liver, spleen (it's possible to live without one, but as long as you have it there's a lot of blood in it). Though those organs are probably clamped off seperately, as the clamps are usually where the vessels are cut and they are probably removed seperately.
The two bottom ones towards small and large intestine.
(Roughly)
The kidneys have their own arteries directly from the aorta each.
It is generally worth noting that all blood vessels inside the body are usually surrounded by fatty tissue, that means somewhat attached to their surroundings. It's not hard to get a place loose to clamp and cut, but they don't move around freely like cables.