Procedures & Suturing Flashcards
Fast-absorbing Gut indications
- epidermis
- absorbable
- 5-7 days tensile strength
- facial lacerations
Vicryl indications
- 2-3 mos absorption
- tensile strength 3-4 weeks
- under casts/splints, single layer closure of tongue/oral mucosa, nailbeds
Chromic Gut indiciations
- rapid absorption
- tensile strength 10-14 days
- under casts/splints, tongue/oral mucosa, nailbeds
Plain Gut indications
- from sheep/cattle intima
- tensile strength 5-7 days
- absorbable
Nylon (ethilon/dermilon) indications
- nonabsorbable
- high tensile strength
Silk indications
- nonabsorbable
- not as strong as other synthetics
- secures percutaneous lines and tubes
polypropylene (prolene, surgilene) indications
- nonabsorbable
- accommodates stretching
Simple interrupted sutures
- most used in clinic/ED
- easy, less risk if one suture fails
simple running suture
- rapid percutaneous closure of longer wounds (even distribution of tension)
- removal or breakage is difficult
- use for wounds at low risk of infection with edges that easily align
Simple buried suture
this also exists, idk lots about it and the slides don’t have any info lol
vertical mattress sutures
- recommended for wounds under tension or inverting edges
- deep and superficial closure
horizontal mattress suture
- wound eversion in areas of moderate to high tension
- good for palms and soles but can strangulate tissue if too tight
subcuticular running suture
- used by surgeons for straight lacerations
- best for linear wounds under little tension
- good cosmetic outcomes but can separate under tension
Tissue adhesives
- non-mucosal lacerations
- <8cm in length
- nail bed repair
- after deep suture
staples - characteristics
- simple and quick
- everts edges
- less tension
- less inflammation
- clean, long, linear wounds
- best on scalp, torso, proximal extremities
Cryotherapy
Destruction of tissue by freezing
- convenient, fast
- minimal pain and scarring
- cost effective
- possible pigment change, destroy hair follicles
shave biopsy
indicated for lesions that are predominantly epidermal w/o extension to the dermis
punch biopsy indication
indicated for lesions requiring dermal or subQ tissue for diagnosis (incisional or excisional)
excisional biopsy
indicated for lesions that are larger and require removal with adequate borders
Appropriate lesions for superficial shave biopsy
- warts
- papillomas
- skin tags
- superficial BCC or SCC
- seborrheic keratoses or actinic keratoses