Module 1_Basic Surgical Techniques Flashcards
What are the two types of surgery? What is the general outline of both?
Soft tissue
-Incision through skin or mucosa
-Through subcutaneous or submucosal tissue
-Frequently through muscles and around veins and artery
-Then reach object of operation
(an example is treatment of tissue hyperplasia for fitting of dentures)
Hard Tissue
- Pass through skin or mucosa
- Reach bone
- Pass through periosteum
- Pass through until reach object of operation
(e. g. reaching a buried tooth root)
What is done after the object of the operation has been managed?
(e.g. after appendix removed in apendectomy, fracture in bone has been reached and repaired, fat removed in liposuction)
Wound toilet, which involves:
- Wound debridement
- Drainage
- Repair
What must access to the object of operation be able to do? Is it generally better to have the access too big or too small and why?
-Access should be planned to cope with all eventualities of the operation in terms of accessing the object of operation and on withdrawing from the site of operation + repair of wound
- Better to have too big as wounds heal at all points rather than at one end, thus 10cm incision will heal at the same rate as 1cm incision provided all factors equal
- Also if 1cm incision involves damage to the edges of the wound then it will heal slower than 10cm (as the wound will now have to replace lost tissue rather than just joining the two ends together, think primary vs secondary intention of healing)
How is access done?
- Making and raising tissue flap
- Create an incision with a sharp scalpel blade using a pen grip with support from the other hand
- For control: single cut should be made towards yourself
- To allow effective healing: cut at right angles to surface - Dissection (once through skin or mucosa)
- Sharp dissection (skin and mucosa, periosteum, bone, object of operation)
- Blunt dissection (most deep soft tissues), separate rather than cut, most tissues have cleavage planes between them so this is often used
What are the principles governing the creation of a flap? Why is a flap generally used for surgical approaches?
Flap used as flap covering layer makes tissue heal better with less chance of breakdown than straight in and out approach
Principles governing flap:
- Adequate access
- Adequate blood supply to flap
- Sharp incision at edges
- Clean dissection (cleavage) of lower edges of flap
- Edges of flap away from deeper operative site (edges of flap not placed over operative site)–> middle of the flap covers site
- Avoid vital structure and parallel muscle forces
What is the advantage of blunt dissection over sharp dissection?
Separating tissues mean they heal by simply coming back together
Healing from an incision requires a formal healing process
What is a cleavage plane?
Any plane in the body where organs can be readily separated without damaging surrounded tissue, facilitates blunt dissections
What is the most common cleavage plane in the oral surgery?
Between mucoperiosteum and bone
- Sharp incision through periosteum down to bone
- Use of periosteal elevator to get beneath periosteum and separate it from the bone
What are the issues if the cleavage plane between mucoperiosteum and bone is supraperiosteal?
- Much more bleeding
- Obscures operator vision
- Poorer post op healing
What are the general guidelines for dissecting through muscle?
First resort: cleave between muscle groups
If in individual muscle then split the muscle fibres
Cutting perpendicular to muscle fibres causes:
- Difficulty cutting
- Bleeding
- Difficult to repair (need to keep ends together and not under tension, which is very difficult as ends retract upon being cut)
- Poorer function overall
Why do bone burs have a larger gap between the blades than dentine burs?
So they don’t clog
Note: bone is also irrigated to help with this and also stops the bone burning
What methods are there to remove bone?
Shaving:
- shave off surface of bone with gentle sweeps over whole area
- Effective for small amounts of bone but if need to remove large amounts it is time consuming
Postage stamp method
- Used to remove larger amounts of bone
- Creation of a series of holes through cortex (surface of bone) which are then joined up to form the outline of the planned section, then pass instrument underneath to prise out the block of bone
Chisels
- Bone (especially young) have grain like wood (i.e. parallel fibres)
- Can be split by chisel
- Mandible grain parallel to occlusal surface
- Maxilla no grain but bone thin (thus come away in flakes)
- Bone gets brittle over 40 years (thus less likely to have a predictable grain that can be split)
- Start by cutting at right angles to the grain first (two stop cuts) then parallel to grain to join the two initial cuts (forms a rectangle of bone that can then be removed)
- Very efficient if sharp chisel and experienced operator, but if not careful can fracture entire mandible or large piece of bone with single cut
What are two instruments for removing bone? What are some properties?
Chisel:
- Single Bevelled tip
- Therefore point on one end
- Hence when connect tend to skid
Osteotome:
- Double bevelled tip
- Thus Point at the centre of the tip
- Thus when connect tend to continue in straight line
Hand instruments: Rongeurs (pro ronjurs) -Cut bone like pliers -End and side cutting -Used for removing pointed edges of bone (such as interseptal bone following removal of teeth) Bone files -Smooth off edges of bone -Mainly to finish off, but can be used to smooth over protrusions like mandibular tori
High speed bone cutting via burs
- Dental burs will drive air into the wound (can cause emphysema/air in tissues)
- Dental burs can also drive lubricating oil into wound (foreign body reaction)
- Dental hand drills can also not be properly sterilised (incorporation of bacteria into area of the wound)
- If use dental drill to drill bone to remove tooth will likely end up with large swelling that will become infected and can compromise airway in mandibular 3rd molar region
- However can use dental drill to section tooth if flap has not yet been open
What are the goals of retraction? Who’s role is it to retract the tissues?
- Provide access
- Protect tissues from instruments (such as drills)
- Assistants (this means undergrad students)–> poor retraction will slow an operation and increase risk of post-op complications–>also pay attention unless you want your glove sutured to the wound
What are the goals of haemostasis?
- Access and vision
- Minimise post op complications (e.g. by prevention of haematoma formation)