Title: Basic Suturing
1- Basic Suturing
- Cynthia Durham, MSN, ANPC, RNFA
- Your greatest tool is your ability to critically
think it is not your hands - Charles Sherman MD
2Financial Disclosure
- I have not received financial compensation from
any pharmaceutical or suture company in
preparation of this suturing course
3Objectives
- At the end of this session the participant will
be able to demonstrate - Injection of a local anesthetic
- Simple interrupted suture closure
- Vertical Mattress suture closure
- and if mastered, then
- Running Subcuticular closure
4Assessment Of Injury
- Most important phase
- Take your time
- Elicit much info quickly
- But in the meantime.
5 Initial Hemostasis
- Direct pressure in absence of foreign bodies 5-10
minutes - "Eye" cautery for smaller blood vessels
- Suture ligature for larger vessels
- Topical or injected agents
6Hemostasis
- May be life saving
- Allows for proper visualization of wound
- Enables accurate repair
- Promotes wound healing
- Decreases scar tissue
7Topical/Injected Hemostatic Agents
- Work either by
- vasoconstriction or enhanced coagulation
- Epi 1100,000 injected along wound edge and wait
10 minutes (more to follow) - Surgicel wait 2-8 minutes
- absorbed in 1-2 weeks
-
8 Mechanism of Injury
- Sharp - i.e. A knife wound
- Usually the cleanest and most easily repair
- Blunt - i.e. Baseball bat lac
- Usually with underlying hematoma
- Frequently filled with devitalized tissue
9 Age of Wound
- "Golden period ideal time to close
- lt 12 hours for most wounds
- 12 - 16 hours for facial wound
10 Extent of Injury
- Tendon ID fx assessment
- Nerve testing
- Blood supply assessment
- Bone assessment
11 Wound Classification
- Laceration
- Penetration
- Amputation
12 Condition of Wound - 8 Terms
- 1. Tidy no devitalized tissue or debris
- 2. Untidy - dead tissue/debris in wound
- Convert to tidy via irrigation and/or debridement
- 3. Clean - little bacterial contamination of
wound - 4. Contaminated - lots of bacteria in wound
13Condition of Wound
- 5. Non- complex
- Flat surface
- Right angle to skin surface
- Linear with a regular configuration
- away from critical anatomy
- Parallel to skin tension lines
14Condition of Wound
- 6. Complex wound
- Convexity or concavity
- Flexion crease
- At angle to normal skin crease
- Non-linear with skin flaps
- Edge irregularities
- Oblique to skin surface
- Must convert to non-complex configuration.
15Condition of Wound
- 7. Simple Wound
- only dermis and fat lacerated
- 8. Compound Wound
- can involve nerves, ducts, tendons,
major blood vessels, - glands, fascia, muscle
16NORMAL WOUND HEALING 5 Phases
- 1. Hemostasis - 3 components
- Vascular spasm
- Platelet aggregation
- Coagulation
- 2. Inflammatory response
- 3. Collagen formation
- 4. Wound contracture
- 5. Re- epithelization
17Factors Affecting Wound Healing
- Age
- Anatomic location
- Technical
- Associated conditions
- Drugs
18Diseases That Affect Wound Healing
- Diabetes- vascular compromise
- Anemia dec O2 transport
- Renal failure toxic metabolites
- Malnutrition dec protein synthesis
- Systemic infection - dec inflam response
- Malignancy - nutritional deficiencies
19Effects of Drugs on Wound Healing
- Steroids - suppress inflammation, protein
synthesis, wound contraction and
re-epithelialization - ASA - suppresses inflammation
- Colchicine - arrests cell replication and
suppresses collagen transport - Chemo - arrests cell replication, suppresses
inflammation and protein synthesis
20Herbs That Reduce Hemostasis
- Chinchona Danshen
- Devils claw Garlic
- Gingko Papaya
- Feverfew Ginger
- Echinacea Vitamin E
21Wound Closure Terminology
- First intention - evaluated, cleaned anesthtized
sutured soon after injury - Second intention - heals by granulation
- Third intention - left open for about 3 days and
then sutured closed
22Guidelines For Antibiotics
- Traumatic injuries with heavy contamination
- Untidy wounds with inadequate debridement
- Wounds entering joints
- /- Wounds gt 6 hours old
- Animal or human bites
- Compromised host
23Local Anesthetics Sensory Modalities
- The art of life is the avoidance of pain
- Thomas Jefferson
- 2 point discrimination
- Pain
- Light touch
- Paresthesia
- Pressure
- Proprioception
24Local Anesthesia Types
- Esters not usually used in laceration repair
short acting, more allergies - Procaine (novocaine), tetracaine (pontocaine),
cocaine - Amides - most widely used
- Lidocaine (xylocaine), bupivicaine (marcaine)
25Lidocaine
- Blocks initiation and conduction of impulses
- How supplied 1, 2 Plain or w/epi
- Onset 0.5-1 min
- Duration 30 - 120 min w/o epi
- 90-180 min w/epi
- Maximum dose plain 300 mg
- Maximum dose w/epi 500 mg
- Peds over 5 yo 75-100mg
26Bupivicaine
- Blocks conduction and generation by increasing
threshold of excitation - How supplied 0.25, 0.5
- Duration 3-6 hrs w/o epi
- 4-8 hrs w/epi
- Onset 10-20 min
- Max dose 175mg w/o epi
- 250mg w/epi
- Peds dose NONE
27Addition Of Epinephrine To Local Anesthetic
- Advantages
- Vasoconstriction
- Decreases bleeding
- Decreases toxicity
- Disadvantages
- Increases BP
- Increased allergic reaction /-
- Tissue ischemia
28Use Of Bicarbonate In Local Anesthetic
- Ph of tissue 7.0
- Ph of lido 6.49
- Mix 110 stable 24 hours
- Ph of lido and bicarb 7.38
29Administration Of Local Anesthetic- 2 Methods
- Packing can be used w/epi or w/o
- Advantage - no needles, doesnt drag bacteria
into wound, provides some hemostasis, works well
in atrophic skin - Disadvantages - not as precise infiltration, may
need a touch up - Technique - gauze soaked with lido and packed
snugly into wound
30Administration of Local Anesthesia 2 Methods
- Infiltration -can be used w/epi or w/o
- Advantages can direct exact amount into tissue,
much more precise - Disadvatage- needle sticks
- Technique inject thru lac edge not intact skin
31Tips For Comfort
- Technique- insert needle thru lac edge not
intact skin - Warm the solution
- Inject s-l-o-w-l-y
- Buffer the solution
- Use a small needle preferably 27-29 ga
32Normal Saline As Local Anesthetic
- Advantage great for people with caine
allergies - Disadvantage - very short acting
33Ice As Local Anesthetic
- Advantage - noninvasive
- Disadvantage - short acting
- Doesnt need to be sterile
34Suture Sizes
- Size based on circumference NOT strength
- Range - 3, 2, 1, 0,1-0, 2-0, 3-0, 4-0, 5-0 etc
to 12-0 - 7-0 human hair circumference
- Choose finest suture capable of doing the job
- See appendix for suture size by region
35Choice Of Sutures
- Absorbable
- Gut, polyglycolic acid, polylactic acid,
polydioxanone. - Known as Chromic, Plain, Dexon, Vicryl, PDS
- Break down either by hydrolysis or proteolytic
enzymes - Used for layered closure, mucous membranes or
genitalia
36Choice Of Sutures
- Nonabsorbable
- Polypropylene, nylon or silk
- Known as Ethilon, Silk, Dermalon, Prolene
- Must be removed
- Used for skin closure
37Choice Of Needle
- Size long enough to pass thru tissue unimpeded
- Suture boxes usually have WYSIWYG pictures
- Size is not standardized
38Choice of Needle
- 3 Tip Shapes
- 1. Taper- used for layers, internal organs
- Will Not pass thru skin
- 2. Cutting standard used for skin closure
- 3. Reverse Cutting preferred by plastic
surgeons -
39Wound Closure Instruments
- 4 needleholder
- Adson forceps
- Suture scissors
- Skin hook,scalpel, iris scissors
40Antiseptics
- Halogens - chlorine, iodines
- Alcohol
- Biguanides
- Oxidizing agents
- Surfactants
41Wound Field Prep
- Hair trimming AVOID
- Packing the wound
- Irrigation
- Prep intact skin
42Suture Patterns
- Simple interrupted
- Vertical mattress
- Subcuticular
43Simple Interrupted
- Easiest to put in take out
- Can be used almost anywhere
- Can be alternated with VM
- Doesnt always every skin edges
44Vertical Mattress
- Best skin edge eversion
- Can be used anywhere
- Takes longer to put in
- Can be more difficult to take out
45Subcuticular
- Used with non- and absorbable suture
- No hash marks
- No visible suture
- Easy less painful to take out
- More difficult to do
- Gaps along suture line
- Patients like it
- Dont use on face or hands
46Depth Of Tissue To Take
- No deeper than laceration!!
- Must have a respect for tissue below the depth of
the laceration as well as laterally!!
47Width of Tissue to Take
- From laceration edge
- Eyelid .5-1mm Nose 1.5-2mm
- Face 1-2mm Trunk 3-5mm
- Extremities 2.5-4mm Scalp 7-7.5mm
- Dorsal Hand 1-2mm
- Volar hand 1.5-2.5mm
- Forehead 2-3mm
48Suture Removal in Days
- Site Adult Child
- Face 4-5 3-4
- Scalp 6-7 5-6
- Trunk 7-10 6-8
- Arm 7-10 5-9
- Leg 8-10 6-8
- Ext surface 8-14 7-12
- Flex surface 8-10 6-8
- Hand 7-12 5-10
- Foot sole 7-12 7-10
49After Care
- Dressings - dry vs moisture permeable
- Topical agents - bacitracin vs neosporin
- Wound check - timing
- Suture removal - when and how
50Technique Tips
- Gentle tissue handling
- Meticulous hemostasis
- Needle enters/exits at right angles to skin
- Skin edges everted NOT inverted
- Ask for help and refer out PRN
- Seek out better technique
51Thank YouPlease take a 15 minute break