Suturing

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French eye needles have how many eyes

2, connected by a slit from the top to through the eyes, with ridges that hold the sutures in place

Synthetic polymer sutures provide wound support for

3 weeks to 6 months

How long does plain gut retain its tensile strength

7-10 days

How long does it take chromic gut to absorb

7-21 days

Composite/coated suture

A core strand of one suture material is jacketed with another of a different type

throw

A loop that forms a knot

Running suture

A method of suturing that uses one continuous suture strand for tissue approximation

Absorbable or non absorbable suture; in surgical procedures with high risk of infection because of their classification or the patients condition a strong suture line with resistance to absorption is needed

A non absorbable suture or absorbable suture with long absorption time may be used. Wounds that are actively infected are not sutured

Tie on a passer

A strand of suture material attached to the tip of an instrument.

Tapered needle

A suture needle that has a round body that tapers to a sharp point.

Interrupted sutures

A technique of bringing tissue together by placing individual suture close together

2-0 is an average size for what kind of tissue

Abdominal wall tissue

Absorbable or non absorbable suture; can be used on non critical tissue that heals very quickly like the mouth and epithelial tissue

Absorbable

Absorbable or non absorbable suture; suture knots or remnants that might come in contact with urine or kidney filtrate can become the source of stones or other mineral deposition so this kind of suture is used

Absorbable suture

Made from Franco compound polymers

Absorbable synthetic sutures

Quickly replaced gut suture

Absorbable synthetic sutures

When does silk begin to break down

After about one year, and usually disappears after two years

Deep tissues in a confined space require what kind of curvature

An extreme curvature

Suture materials are used to

Approximate tissues

The process of suturing two appoint tissue edges together

Approximation

Why is finished suture line strong in interrupted suture technique

Because the tension of the wound edges is distributed over many anchor points. Many interrupted stitches produce a secure suture line with minimal scarring

Why are gut sutures opened away from the field

Because they are packaged in an alcohol and water solution that can be a source of fire on the field

Least traumatic and safest needle point

Blunt needle

This needle has a round shaft and a blunt tip

Blunt needle

This needle point does not puncture the tissue but slides between tissue fibers

Blunt needle

Used for suturing tissues and organs that are soft and spongy like the liver, spleen, and kidneys it is now advocated for general suture use

Blunt needle

3 basic types of needle points

Blunt, tapered, cutting

Bioactivity

Body's response to suture

Fiber wire structure

Braided

What forms is nylon available in

Braided or monofilament strands

Virgin silk structure

Braided or twisted

Silk is soft and pliable and available in what forms

Braided or twisted form

Suture materials do what quickly in the presence of infection and certain metabolic conditions

Break down

inert

Causing little or no reaction. In tissue or with other materials

Debridement

Chemical or mechanical removal of necrotic or non viable tissue and foreign bodies following infection or trauma

Bioactivity depends on

Chemical structure of the suture material and condition of the patient

A double armed suture is used for

Circular incisions, like ophthalmic surgery, or for hollow lumens, such as blood vessels or the intestine

Polypropylene comes in what colors

Clear or blue in color

3 types of needle eyes

Closed eye, French eye( split or spring eye), atraumatic suture (swaged)

Two general types of suture techniques

Continuous and interrupted

A needle with the cutting edge on the inside of the curve

Conventional cutting needle

Has a triangular shaft, curve tends to slice tissue in upward direction

Conventional cutting needle

Selection of suture is based on

Critical nature of the tissue, healing time, required strength during healing, requirement for little or no scar formation, urinary tract, risk of infection, skin, and cosmetic closure

Measured as a circumferential fraction in a complete circle

Curvature of a needle

Needle that has a cutting edge along its shaft

Cutting needle

Needle used on fibrous connective tissue ex: skin, joint capsule, tendon

Cutting needle

Detachable suture types

De-tach and control release

Nylon passes through what kinds of tissues very easily

Delicate tissues of the eye or blood vessels

Suture used to close the skin in areas where the incision is subjected to excessive strain

Dermal silk

Non absorbable sutures

Dermalon surgilon ethilon monosof supramid, prolene, fiberwire, steel

What form is polyester suture used in and what colors does it come in

Dry state; green, blue, or white

Compliance/pliability

Ease of handling, pliability makes the suture material easier to manipulate

Vertical and horizontal mattress stitches provide

Extra security to the suture line

T/F polyester based suture is extremely weak

False

T/F polymers are used in a wet state

False

T/F polyester based suture can be monofilament or braided

False; braided

Polypropylene knots are

Flat and do not back out when placed properly

Why is silk the gold standard of suture material

For its pliability, tight knots, and ease of use

Suture packaged in alcohol and water solution

Gut

Can be dipped in saline just before use

Gut suture; prevents the suture from breaking, the suture is dipped not soaked because soaking the suture can makes it soggy and weak and it absorbs easily

Continuous or running suture

Has a knot at the beginning and the end, composed of one continuous strand of suture

Where is plain gut primarily used

In mucous membrane or in tissue where stones can form, such as the biliary or urinary systems

Sutures selected for cosmetic closure are

Inert and usually monofilament to cause the least amount of tissue injury as the suture is drawn through

Individually placed, knotted, and cut

Interrupted suture

Finished suture line is very strong

Interrupted suture technique

Highly inert sutures cause

Little or no bioactivity (inflammation)

Needle is passed through each side f the wound edges, passed underneath one loop of the suture and provides increased hemostasis on the wound edges

Locking stitch

This suture technique requires assistant or scrub to hold traction on the suture length

Locking stitch, this traction keeps the suture from backing out or becoming loose while the next stitch is being placed

Stainless steel suture is dispensed from the package as

Long, precut strands with considerable spring

When the risk of infection is high sutures with what capillarity are preferred

Low

Plasticity

Materials ability to stretch and retain a new shape. Elasticity is good as long as the suture retains its strength when stretched. Increased plasticity contributes to secure knots

Absorbable synthetic substances

Maxon, PDS II, monocryl, monocryl plus, vicryl

11-0 is commonly used in

Microsurgery, light enough to remain suspended in air

Chromic gut structure

Monofilament

Maxon structure

Monofilament

PDS II structure

Monofilament

Plain gut structure

Monofilament

Prolene

Monofilament

Stainless steel

Monofilament

Nylon structure

Monofilament and braided

Vicryl structure

Monofilament and braided

Synthetic polymer sutures are available in

Monofilament and braided form

Stainless steel is available in

Monofilament and twisted forms

Structurally what 3 categories are sutures divided into

Monofilament, multifilament, or composite/coated

Where is silk suture used

Most deep tissues, intestinal, vascular, ophthalmic, and neurosurgical procedures

Braided suture

Multiple fibers are intertwined

Twisted suture

Multiple fibers are twisted in the same direction

What suture materials cause the most tissue reaction

Natural fiber and protein based sutures

Swaged or atraumatic suture

Needle with suture preattached

Absorbable or non absorbable suture; Sutures placed in critical tissue or areas of the body like the heart, blood vessels, and respiratory tract

Non absorbable suture

Absorbable or non absorbable suture; some tissues (usually connective) are under high stress in the body, suture larger in size as well

Non absorbable suture

Used in tissues that require more than 10 days of healing time

Non absorbable suture

First synthetic suture material that's still widely used

Nylon

High tensile strength suture but in larger sizes it's stiff, difficult to handle, and may cut through tissue

Nylon

Wounds prone to infection are sutured with low Capillarity action sutures such as

Nylon or polypropylene

Non absorbable synthetic substances

Nylon, prolene, stainless steel, polyethylene (tiger wire)

Double armed suture is

One with a needle swaged to each end

What are the 3 types of polyester based sutures

PET based, PBT based, polybutester based

How is plain gut digested and how can this be bad

Plain gut is digested quickly and absorbed by tissues, but the rapid reaction can cause tissue inflammation

Absorbable sutures

Plain gut, chromic gut, virgin silk, maxon, PDS II, monocryl, monocryl plus, vicryl,

Absorbable natural substances

Plain gut,chromic gut

Polypropylenes smooth surface make it popular for

Plastic, ophthalmic, and vascular surgery

The coated form is widely used for cardiovascular surgery, because of its strength to size ratio

Polyester based suture

What suture is dyed to make it easier to see on the surgical field

Polymer, but they are available in natural color for superficial tissues

Extremely inert monofilament suture

Polypropylene

What suture has a high plasticity

Polypropylene

Synthetic coating material that resist absorption and decrease suture drag

Polytetrafluoroethylene

Needle eye

Provides the attachment site for the suture

One end of the suture is anchored and stitches are placed around 5e periphery of the open lumen, suture is then drawn tight around the neck of the lumen and tied

Purse string suture

Special continuous suture technique for closing the end of a tubular structure (lumen)

Purse string suture

Suture technique most commonly used on the abdomen

Purse string suture

Closed eye

Resembles a sewing needle but round in shape. eye hole is round, rectangular, or square

If bacteria is present suture materials with high capillarity are able to

Retain and spread infection by means of suture fibers

Heavy sutures are placed through all the tissue layers of the body wall several centimeters from the primary suture line and perpendicular to the incision

Retention sutures

Interrupted suture technique used to provide additional support to wound edges in abdominal surgery

Retention sutures

Plastic or rubber bolsters, or small lengths of tubing, are threaded through the suture to prevent it from cutting into the patients skin

Retention sutures

A needle with the cutting edge on the outside or lower edge of the curve

Reverse cutting needle

Stronger than cutting needle and produces minimal scarring

Reverse cutting needle

Rapid suture technique that alternates the needle from one side of the tissue to the other, and uses little suture material

Running suture

Dehiscence

Separation of edges of a surgical wound during healing

Suture is coated to prevent wicking, handles well, knots remain tight and secure

Silk

2 sutures that have the least memory and greatest pliability

Silk and polyester

All suture material that have the USP label should meet what standards

Size conformity, tensile strength, and sterility

Needles used in ophthalmic surgery to separate corneal and scleral tissue

Spatula needle

Side cutting needle with a flat surface on the top and the bottom

Spatula needle

Needle sharp ends and kinks easily

Stainless steel

Strongest of all suture materials

Stainless steel

This suture material must be kept straight and delivered without kinks or bends, which can tear through tissue as the strand is drawn through

Stainless steel

Used in the approximation of bone and other connective tissue

Stainless steel

Inert suture material for little or no scar formation; in some locations of the body, scarring or granulation tissue around knots can result in loss of function. Repair of structures of the hand, such as a tendon or nerve, require very inert suture materials that must pass through the tissue with no resistance or tissue fraying, even at the microscopic level.

Stainless steel (reserved for connective tissue), nylon, polypropylene are the most inert

What are the most inert all suture materials

Stainless steel, titanium, polypropylene (prolene)

Needle is placed within the dermis from side to side and brings skin edges together in close approximation, and no suture material is visible from the outside, producing very minimal scarring if any

Subcuticular suture

Suture used for cosmetic closure or in pediatric patients

Subcuticular suture

Hemostatic agent

Substance applied to bleeding tissue in order to enhance clotting.

It is the only naturally occurring absorbable suture commonly used in the United states

Surgical gut aka catgut

Protein collagen derived from the submucosal layer of beef or sheep intestine

Surgical gut aka catgut

Absorbable suture

Suture material that is broke down and metabolized by the body

Non-absorbable suture

Suture material that resists breakdown in the body

Wicking

Sutures made of multifilament strands absorb moisture and hold body fluids

Memory of suture

Sutures tendency to retain its original shape or configuration after it is removed from the package

Reverse cutting edge at the tip and a round body

Taper cut needle

Used for suturing dense fibrous, connective tissue ex: fascia, tendon, peritoneum

Taper cut needle

Primarily used for suturing soft tissue like subcutaneous fat, dura, GI, and vascular tissue

Tapered needle

Round body with a tapered sharp point

Tapered needle

This needle punctures tissue making an opening for the body of the needle to follow

Tapered needle

What is the most important quality of a suture

Tensile strength

Suture materials used in the US must be approved by

The FDA and USP (United States pharmacopeia)

Capillary action

The ability of suture material to absorb and wick fluid

Tensile strength

The amount of force needed to break the suture

tensile strength

The amount of force or stress a suture can withstand before breaking.

Swage

The area of an atraumatic suture where the suture strand is fused to the needle.

Weakest point of a suture

The knot, suture material becomes 10-40% weaker at the knot

anastomosis

The surgical creation of an pending between two blood vessels, hollow organs, or ducts

Detachable suture means

The suture can be detached from the needle by pulling it straight back from the swage

The loop of the knot is also referred to as a

Throw

approximate

To bring tissues together by sutures or other means

Ligate

To place a loop or tie around a blood vessel or duct

What is the primary use of sutures

To repair or reconstruct tissue

Used for very delicate retraction in situations where the edges of the tissue being sutured need to be elevated slightly or simply held in tension

Traction suture

What antiseptic can be incorporated into absorbable synthetic suture

Triclosan

T/F absorbable synthetic sutures are highly inert

True

T/F chromic gut and plain gut are rapidly broken down in the presence of infection

True

T/F most commercial needles are now manufactured with the suture preattached

True

T/F nylon is a highly inert suture material

True

T/F polypropylene can be used when infection is present and left in place for extended periods of time

True

T/F the interrupted suture technique is stronger than a continuous suture technique

True

A multifilament suture can be divided into two types

Twisted, braided

Sutures must be what in diameter to maintain tensile strength

Uniform

Mainly used for ophthalmologic procedures because of its pliability and performance in eye tissue

Virgin silk

Non absorbable natural substances

Virgin silk

When are detachable sutures used

When the surgery calls for rapid placement of multiple interrupted (individually tied) sutures Ex: anastomosis

Monofilament suture

a single continuous fiber made by extruding and stretching a synthetic material.

Multifilament suture

many filaments that together form one strand of suture

Evisceration

protrusion of viscera through an incision

The size of the suture material indicates the

smaller the number, the larger the diameter, the size of the suture indicates strength and application

Suture material can be made from

synthesized chemicals, animal protein, metal, and natural fibers


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