Sutures:
Sutures bind tissues together Sutures are used to hold skin,
internal organs, blood vessels, and all other tissues after they have been
severed by injury or surgery. Sutures are designed to help the healing of the
body by closely opposing the two sides of a wound to minimize scar formation or
to prevent leaking blood, like in vessels. They have to comply with several
requirements to be effective. They must be strong (so they do not break),
non-toxic and hypoallergenic (to avoid adverse reactions in the body), and
flexible (so they can be tied and knotted easily). Also, they must lack the
so-called "wick effect", which means that sutures must not allow
fluids to penetrate the body through them from outside, which could easily
cause infections.
Sizes
of Sutures:
Sizes of Sutures are
sized according to the USP scale. Sizes and diameters are available on a scale
from 6 to 0, which is 0.07 mm in diameter, to 2, which is 0.5 mm: 6-0 = 0.07 mm
5-0 = 0.10 mm 4-0 = 0.15 mm 3-0 = 0.20 mm 2-0 = 0.30 mm 0 = 0.35 mm 1 = 0.40 mm
2 = 0.5 mm
Types
of Sutures:
There are two types of sutures 1) absorbable sutures 2) non-absorbable
sutures
A) Based on origin animal- catgut, silk vegetable- cotton, linen synthetic -
nylon, metal- stainless steel B) Whether the material is absorbable or
not Absorbable or Non-absorbable
1) Absorbable Sutures:
Absorbable Sutures Absorbable sutures are made of materials that
are broken down in tissue after a given period, which depending on the suture
can be from ten days to four weeks. They are used therefore in many of the
inner tissues of the body. In most cases, three weeks is sufficient for the
wound to close firmly. The suture is not needed anymore, and the fact that it
disappears is an advantage, as there is no foreign material left inside the
body and no need for the patient to have the sutures removed.
Absorbable sutures were originally made of the intestines of
sheep, the so-called catgut. The inventor, a 10th-century surgeon named al-
Zahrawi reportedly discovered the dissolving nature of catgut when his lute's
strings were eaten by a monkey. Today, gut sutures are made of specially
prepared beef and sheep intestine and may be untreated (plain gut), tanned with
chromium salts to increase their persistence in the body (chromic gut).
However, the major part of the absorbable sutures used are now
made of synthetic polymer fibers, which may be braided or monofilament; these
offer numerous advantages over gut sutures, notably ease of handling, low cost,
low tissue reaction, consistent performance and guaranteed non-toxicity.
Examples
of Absorbable Sutures:
Absorbable Sutures Name Brand Name Plain
Catgut --- Chromic Catgut ---Poliglecaprone 25 Monocryl Polyglactin 910 Vicryl
Polyglycolic acid Dexon Polydioxanone PDS II
2)
Nonabsorbable sutures:
Nonabsorbable sutures are made of materials that are not
metabolized by the body, and are used therefore either on skin wound closure,
where the sutures can be removed after a few weeks, or in some inner tissues in
which absorbable sutures are not adequate. This is the case, for example, in
the heart and in blood vessels, whose rhythmic movement requires a suture that
stays longer than three weeks, to give the wound enough time to close. or
tendons that take a long time to heal because of their poor blood supply.
There are several materials used for no absorbable sutures. The
most common is a natural fiber, silk, which undergoes a special manufacturing
process to make it adequate for its use in surgery. Other nonabsorbable sutures
are made of artificial fibers, like polypropylene, polyester or nylon; these
may or may not have coatings to enhance their performance characteristics.
Finally, stainless steel wires are used in orthopedic surgery and for sternal
closure in cardiac surgery.
Example of nonabsorbable sutures:
Nonabsorbable sutures Name Brand Name Silk Braided Polyester
Ethibond, Tyvek Stainless Steel Wire --- Polypropylene Prolene Nylon ---
Ethibond
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