Chapter 16: Suture Material, Tissue Staplers, Ligation Devices, and Closure Methods Flashcards

1
Q

What are types of barbed suture?

A

VLOC - loop at end
Stratafix - tab end
Quill - bidirectional, two needles

In GIT surgery, results in faster repair with equivalent or better bursting strength and leakage
- 2-0 barbed break strength is like 3-0 monofilament

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2
Q

What are the 2 major methods of suture absorption?

A
  • Enzymatic (predominates in natural materials)
  • Hydrolytic (Predominates in synthetic sutures)
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3
Q

List the (5) disadvantages of Catgut (twisted material from SI submucosa of cattle/sheep):

A
  • Relatively weak
  • Not uniform (has weak areas)
  • High tissue reaction
  • Absorption is extremely variable and unpredictable
  • very rapid absorption in gastric or intestinal surgery (<24hr)
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4
Q

What species of worms produce silk?
What are features of silk suture?

A

Bombyx mori
Anaphe pernyi
- Excellent handling and knot security
- Significant tissue reactivity (good for progressive occlusion)

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5
Q

What are the disadvantages of Nylon Leader Line for CCL repair?

A

It was not designed as an implantable biomaterial. It will elongate under constant loads and its physical properties are significantly influenced by steam sterilization

Steam sterilization resulted in a 204x increase in elongation

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6
Q

What is the strongest form of suture?

A

Polyester composite sutures eg FiberWire (multifilament UHMW polyethylene core surrounded by braided polyester and polyethylene exterior)

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7
Q

What is meant by the warp, weft, and bias of woven mesh?

A

Warp: lengthwise filaments, unidirectional
Weft: weaves in and out of warp
Bias: 45 degree angle, more stretchy

Tend to be more elastic and fluid in the bias direction

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8
Q

What is meant by the course and wale of a knitted mesh?

A

Course: row of distendable loops across fabric
Wale: Column of loops along the edge (this accounts for strength)

*anisotropic in different directions (can elongate more on course than wale)

They are anisotropic with more elongation along the course than the wale

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9
Q

What is meant by the pore size and porosity of mesh materials? How does this affect its properties?

A
  • The ratio of material to air
  • Polypropylene mesh - pore size 0.6-0.9mm with porosity 28-32%
  • ePTFE pore size is 20-25nm

Very small pore size will prevent capillary ingrowth causing encapsulation rather than incorporation

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10
Q

What biologic materials have been used as mesh?

A
  • Porcine SI submucosa
  • Bovine pericardium
  • Acellular dermal matrix
  • Canine fascia lata

PSIS is gone/can’t be found on histo at 3 months after implantation

Fascia lata consistently has shown the best biological properties followed by polypropylene, then PSIS

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11
Q

What are the recommendations for implantation of mesh?

A
  • Trimming with electrosurgery may seal edges and prevent fraying
  • Create a hem
  • Horizontal mattress sutures will engage more mesh
  • If under tension, should overlay 1cm of tissue
  • Little or no tension, 0.6cm overlap
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12
Q

What are the dimensions of regular and wide skin staples? Are skin staples appositional, inverting or everting?

A

Regular: 4.8-5.7mm
Wide: 6.5-6.9mm

Slightly everting

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13
Q

What are the principles of vascular clip application?

A
  • Vessel is skeletonised prior to application
  • Diameter of the vessel should be no more than 2/3 and no less than 1/3 the length of the clip
  • Clip applied several mm from the cut edge
  • Arteries and veins clipped separately
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14
Q

What height are the staples in each colored cartridges for TA devices? What do they reduce to when fired?

A

Green - 4.8mm reduces to 2.0mm
Blue - 3.5mm reduces to 1.5mm
White - 2.5mm reduces to 1mm

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15
Q

What can linear staplers be used for?

A
  • Pulmonary
  • Cardiac
  • GI
  • hepatobiliary
  • reproductive
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16
Q

What are the rules regarding tissue thickness for circular stapling devices?

A

Should not be used when combined tissue thickness is less than 1mm or greater than 2.5mm

They make an inverted anastomosis

17
Q

What are the byproducts of cyanoacrylate glue?

A

Cyanoacetate and formaldehyde

18
Q

What are the benefits of using cyanoacrylate glue for wound closure?

A
  • Speed
  • No need for suture removal
  • Reduced cost
  • Barrier to microbial penetration
  • Antibacterial effects

In people, a study has shown that wounds closed with glue had significantly fewer post-op infections than sutures wounds

19
Q

What are (3) rapidly absorbed sutures?

A

1) poliglycolic acid (DEXON): 60-90 days. 50% strength at 2-3 weeks
2) polyglactin (VICRYL): same, 50% 2-3 weeks
3) poliglecaprone (MONOCRYL): 90-120 days completely absorbed, 50% strength 1 week, 80% 2 weeks

20
Q

What are (3) slowly absorbed sutures?

A

1) polydioxanone: 50% strength 5-6 weeks
2) polyglyconate (Maxon): 50% strength 4-5 weeks
3) glycomer 631(Biosyn): 50% 2-3 weeks