Suture material & Selection Flashcards
How to pick the right suture?
o Smallest diameter suture that will adequately secure wound tissue
o Strong as the normal tissue
o Maintains strength until tissue adequately healed
o Handling & knot strength necessary
What does capillarity mean?
process in which fluid wicked into multifilament fibers (important with hollow structures)
- ALL BRAIDED SUTURES HAVE SOME CAPILLARITY!
Monofilament suture:
smooth, requires greater surface tension (worse knot security)
o Non capillary
Multifilament suture:
rough, cause more tissue trauma & has coating to reduce drag “slippery sandpaper”
o Don’t use braided suture for intestinal closure, bladder, or c-section
o Avoid in contaminated or infected sites
What is absorbable suture?
- Organic origin ( digested by tissue enzyme) or synthetics degraded via hydrolysis (non-inflammatory) and loses its tensile strength within 60 days!
What is nonabsorbable suture?
- Encapsulated/wall off by fibrous tissue, that retains tensile strength >60 days (can fragment & lose strength in place)
What suture to use in different tissues:
- Skin: monofilament nylon (avoid capillary)
- SQ: monofilament (absorbable & synthetic)
- Fascia: slow degrading syn.absorbable (PDS)
- GI: synthetic monofilament absorbable
- Bladder: absorbable monofilament