Sutures and Suture Techniques
Sutures and Suture Techniques
Sutures and Suture Techniques
TECHNIQUES
Suture:
used to close a wound
used to make a ligature
a stitch or series of stitches
method of use e.g.interrupted/mattress
verb---to suture or to stitch
1
Factors that influence suture
selection
Physical properties
Biological interaction e.g. absorbability
Size of tissue
Tissue tension
3
Properties of an ideal suture
1. High and uniform tensile strength
2. Usable in any tissue
3. Bio-inert—cause minimal tissue reaction
e.g. pain, swelling, allergy
4. Easy to sterilize. Resterilization without
altering tensile strength
5. Easy availability and cheap
4
Properties of ideal suture
cont’d
6. Easy to handle dry or wet
7. Non-capillary
8. Easy to knot and good knot security
9. Predicable absorbability rate
10. Fine in caliber yet strong
6
Fate of sutures in the body
Enzymatic absorption / phagocytosis
Encapsulation by fibrous tissue sheath
Physical removal
7
Absorbable sutures
Definition
loss of appreciable amount of initial
tensile strength within 60 days.
8
Types of absorbable sutures
Catgut (surgical gut)
submucosa of sheep or pig intestine
serosa of bovine intestine
gamma sterilized
at least 85% alcohol
not resterilizable
9
Catgut cont’d
Plain catgut
untreated
loss of strength faster
3-7 days to start losing
10
Chromic catgut
Different degrees of tanning with chromic
acid
Determines rate of absorption
Mild, medium, hard
Longer in tissue than plain catgut
Reduced tissue reaction
11
Advantages of catgut
Easy to handle
Tolerated in most tissue
Degree of elasticity = non-strangulating
12
Disadvantages of catgut
Swells when wet
Cannot use in septic conditions
Non-resterilizable
Degree of capillarity
Indications:
internal structures, muscles
At least 3 “throws”
13
Collagen
Flexor tendons of steers
Similar to catgut
Smoother than catgut
Ophthalmic surgery
Wherever absorbable suture is required
14
Polyglycolic acid (Dexon®) and
polyglactin 910 (Vicryl®)
Braided synthetic
Ethylene oxide
Polyglycolic acid—polymer of glycolic acid
and hydroacetic acid
Polyglactin 910—polymer of glycolic acid
and lactic acid in 9:10
Absorption by hydrolysis
15
Advantages of dexon and vicryl
Easy to knot since braided
No swelling when wet
Lubricated for ease of slippage thru tissue
Stronger than catgut (2x as the same G of
catgut)
55% original strength remains in 14 days
and more than 20% at 21 days
16
Advantages of dexon and vicryl
cont’d
Absorbed within 90 days by hydrolysis
Less tissue reaction
Disadvantages:
Knot slippage
17
Indications
Used like catgut
Where absorbable suture is needed
Urinary tract surgeries
18
Polydioxanone (PDS)
Synthetic polyester
Monofilament
Slow hydrolysis
19
Advantages of polydioxanone
Low tissue reaction
Monofilament
Tolerable in sepsis
Moderate Knot security
Strong
At 28 days it retains 50% strength
Smooth passage without tissue drag
20
Advantages of PDS cont’d
Can use in friable tissue
Ethylene oxide
------------------------------------------------
Wherever absorbable suture required.
21
Non-absorbable sutures
Retain tensile strength more than 60 days.
Natural fibres
Metallic sutures
Synthetic fibres
Less tissue reaction
Can cause draining sinuses
22
Types of non-absorbable
sutures
Nylon (dermalon, ethilon)
Polyamide polymer
Multifilament occasionally
23
Advantages of nylon
Relatively inert
Tissue encapsulation
Non-capillary and can use in sepsis
High tensile strength
Degree of elasticity
24
Disadvantages of nylon
High “memory” stiffness-resists bending
Poor knot security
Need at least 4 “throws”
Skin suture
25
Polymerized caprolactam
(supramid, vetafil)
Twisted synthetic fibre
Smooth coating
________________________________
Advantages
High tensile strength
26
Advantages of polymerized
caprolactam cont’d
Cheap
---------------------------------------------------
Disadvantages
Slight capillarity
27
Disadvantages of polymerized
caprolactam cont’d
Smooth and knot slippage
Multifilamented and can harbour microbes
________________________________
Skin suture unless autoclaved
28
Polypropylene (Prolene) and
polyethylene
Synthetic polymerized sutures
Polyolefins
Monofilament
Ethylene oxide
29
Advantages of polypropylene and
polyethylene
Strong
Inert and maintain strength long. Little
tissue reaction
Non-capillary
Elastic
Easier to Knot and handle than nylon
Use in sepsis
30
Disadvantages of polypropylene
and polyethylene
High memory, stiff, poor knot security.
It requires several throws
------------------------------------------------
Sites with tension
31
Polyesters
Braided from synthetic polymers
Less tissue reaction
Greater strength
Ethylene oxide
Teflon coated = tevdek, polydek
Silicone coated = ticron
Polybutylate = ethibond
32
Polyesters cont’d
Uncoated form
drags in tissue
cuts tissue
knots poorly
33
Polyesters cont’d
Coating or impregnating:
decreasing capillarity
decreasing tissue drag
reduce knot security
quite unreactive in tissue
strong
multifilament-harbour infection
34
Polyesters cont’d
Used in aseptic conditions
e.g. mersilene, dacron
Skin suture and cardiovascular surgeries
35
Polybutylate
Coated braided polyester
Fine filaments
Braiding gives strength
Soft
Coated with minimal polybutylate to give
smooth lubrication-easy tissue passage
36
Polybutylate cont’d
Coating makes it non-reactive and strong
Poor knot security
Opthalmic and cardiac surgeries
37
Mersilene
Braided polyester
Fine filaments of polyester
Uncoated
Smooth
High tensile strength
Not affected by wetness
Tolerable in most tissues
38
Mersilene cont’d
Non-capillary
Poor knot security
Gamma irradiation
39
Silk (Mersilk)
Silk worm larvae
Silicone/wax coated –reduce capillarity
Twisted and braided
Packaged dry
Loses strength when wet
Dyed –visibility.
40
Advantages of silk
Easy to handle
Braiding increases strength
Retains strength long
30% strength lost in 14 days and 60% in 30
days.
Good knot security
Tolerated in most tissue
41
Advantages of silk cont’d
Cheap
Easily sterilized
--------------------------------------------
Disadvantages of silk
high capillarity
transports infection
Ophthalmic, plastic and cardiovascular
42
Cotton suture
Umbilical tape
Cotton plant fibresd
Twisted/braided
Advantages
cheap
Tolerated in tissue
43
Cotton suture
Disadvantages of cotton suture
Poor handling than silk
Higher capillarity than silk
Harbours bacteria and cause fistulation
Clinging onto gloves
Perineal region-anus, vulva
44
Stainless steel suture (surgical
steel)
Alloy of iron i.e. iron-nickel-chromium
Monofilament
Very strong
Good knot security
Irradiation
Inert and non-corrosive
Re-sterilizable, septic wound use
45
Disadvantages of steel suture
Tissue and glove cutting
Poor handling
Kinking
Lack of elasticity
Difficult to knot
Bulky knot
46
Surgical steel cont’d
Skin suture
Tendon repair
Neural surgery
Orthopaedic surgery
47
Metal clips
Michel clips
Stainless steel
Non-corrosive
Pointed at the ends
Special pair of forceps to bend them
Pucker the skin
Increase skin scarring
48
Metal clips cont’d
Common in Caslick’s operation in mares
Easy to sterilize
Quick application
Easy application
49
staples
Proximate staples
Stainless steel
Skin stapling
Used as staplers
Fast closure
Well tolerated in tissue
Easily sterilized
50
staplers
Costly
Special pair of forceps as applicators and
extractors
51
Surgical linen
Flax fibres twisted or braided
Specially treated to minimize inherent
irregularities of the material
Packaged dry
Strengthened when wet
Lower strength than other non-absorbable
sutures
Ethylene oxide, rare use.
52
Special skin closure products
Closure strips
adhesive tapes with special medication
excellent initial adhesion
good long-term wound support
not affected by wetness
more use in humans
53
Skin sealants
Applied on the suture line
Special medicated aerosol sprays
Medicated bandages
Impregnated with wound antimicrobial
54