The purpose of a suture
- to hold a wound together in good apposition until such time as the natural healing process is sufficiently well established to make the support from the suture material unnecessary and redundant.
Choice of a suture
- Choice of suture depends on:
- Properties of suture material
- Absorption rate
- Handling characteristics and knotting properties
- Size of suture
- Type of needle
- Properties of suture material
Natural suture materials
- Absorbable
- Catgut - Plain or chromic
- Catgut - Plain or chromic
- Non-Absorbable
- Silk
- Linen
- Stainless Steel Wire
- Silk
Synthetic suture materials
- Absorbable
- Polyglycolic Acid (Dexon)
- Polyglactin (Vicryl)
- Polydioxone (PDS)
- Polyglyconate (Maxon)
- Polyglycolic Acid (Dexon)
- Non-Absorbable
- Polyamide (Nylon)
- Polyester (Dacron)
- Polypropylene (Prolene)
- Polyamide (Nylon)
Absorbable suture are broken down by either:
- Proteolysis (e.g. Catgut)
- Hydrolysis (e.g. Vicryl, Dexon)
Catgut
- Made from the submucosa of sheep gastrointestinal tract
- Broken down within about a week
- Chromic acid delays hydrolysis
- Even so it is destroyed before many wounds have healed
Silk
- Strong and handles well but induces strong tissue reaction
- Capillarity encourages infection causing suture sinuses and abscesses
Vicryl
- Tensile strength
- 65% @ 14 days
- 40% @ 21 days
- 10% @ 35 days
- 65% @ 14 days
- Absorption complete by 70 days
Polydioxone
- Tensile strength
- 70% @ 14 days
- 50% @ 28 days
- 14% @ 56 days
- 70% @ 14 days
- Absorption complete by 180 days
There are many factors to select the suture material, depending upon the wound and also suture sizes.
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