Suture Principle
Suture Principle
khaled hassan
Wound Preparation
Control bleeding; ligation of obvious bleeding
vessels and application of occlusive pressure
dressings
The pressure dressings also provide temporary
immobilization
Local anesthetics offer advantages beyond their
anesthetic properties
Careful cleansing of skin and wounds
Debridment Excision of tissue from wounds
Tissue forceps
The Needle
Round
Reverse cutting
Conventional cutting
suture materials
classified by
size,
resorbability,
whether or not they are monofilament or polyfilament.
Plain Gut
This natural product
derived from sheep or cattle intestine.
poor tensile strength
relatively high tissue reactivity.
Plain gut retains a significant tensile strength
for 4 to 5 days,
Chromic gut (soaked in chromic acid salts)
proteolytic absorption
introduced in 1974
copolymer of lactide and glycolide,
Vicryl, like Dexon, retains only 8% of its
original tensile strength by 28 days.
Vicryl is degraded by hydrolysis
minimal tissue reaction.
Vicryl is braided and is either clear (undyed) or
violet (dyed).
Silk
natural protein filaments spun by the silkworm
larva as it builds its cocoon.
Modern silk is braided, soft,.
it has the lowest tensile strength.
The strength decreases progressively over
about 1 year, and the suture is absorbed by the
end of 2 years .
It elicits more inflammatory reaction
high capillarity owing to its braiding
Nylon
introduced in 1940, first synthetic suture
synthetic polyamide polymer fiber
Nylon is the most widely used nonabsorbable suture in
cutaneous surgery as a monofilament (Ethilon).
degradation through hydrolysis at very slow rates. at 2
years
advantage
high tensile strength,
excellent elastic properties,
minimal tissue reactivity
low cost.
Nylon
disadvantage
prominent memory,
Ethilon can be soaked in alcohol to decrease
its memory and increase its pliability.
Polypropylene
(Prolene)
a plastic suture
extremely inert suture
very slippery
Disadvantages
compromised knot security.
plasticity.
SUTURING TECHNIQUES
ideal wound closure technique include
Permanent suture marks can develop when the wound is too tight or
left in place too long. This results from pressure on the skin
during the time that the suture is left in place and can be
exacerbated by tension on the wound, edema, large bites of tissue,
and infection.
Interrupted Suture
This is the simplest and most frequently used type
Technique
The needle enters 4 mm away from the margin of the
flap (mobile tissue) and exits at the same distance on the
opposite side.
The two ends of the suture are then tied in a knot and
are cut 0.8 cm above the knot.
Over-tightening of the suture must also be avoided (risk
of tissue necrosis), as well as overlapping of wound
edges when positioning the knot.
Advantage
sutures are placed in a row, inadvertent loosening of one
or even losing one will not influence the rest.
Interrupted Suture
surgeons knot
safety knot
Dog Ear
After closing a long incision, it is
common that one of the two ends
of the incision has extra length
and a puckered appearance or a
"dog ear" exists.
This technique removes the
excess tissue and allows for a
cosmetic closure.
The remaining tissue is tented upward, and a scalpel excises the
excess and extends the incision.
The Wound can then be sutured
closed the remaining distance
Continuous Suture
Indication
used for the suturing of wounds that are
superficial but long.
Advantage
it is quicker and requires fewer knots, so that the
wound margins are not tightened too much, thus
avoiding the risk of ischemia of the area.
Disadvantage
if the suture is inadvertently cut or loosened, the
entire suture becomes loose.
Mattress Suture
interrupted and continuous horizontal and vertical
Indication
in cases where strong and secure reapproximation of
wound margins is required.
The vertical suture may be used for deep incisions,
while the horizontal suture is used in cases which
require limiting or closure of soft tissues over osseous
cavities, e.g., postextraction tooth sockets.
sutures removal
Sutures in mucous membrane
are removed after 5 to 7 days.
In the skin alternate stitches
are often taken out about the
third to fifth day and the
remainder between the fifth
and eighth days. A good
guide is that as soon as they
begin to get loose they should
be taken out.
They should first be cleaned
and then removed.