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A Review of Sutures and Suturing Techniques

The Journal of Dermatologic Surgery and Oncology, 1992
The ideal suture is strong, handles easily, and forms secure knots. It causes minimal tissue inflammation and does not promote infection. It stretches and accommodates wound edema. Although no single suture possesses all of these features, proper selection of sutures helps achieve better results in skin surgery.
Barry Waldman   +2 more
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Surgical instruments, sutures and suturing techniques

British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2007
Anthropological studies suggest that prehistoric man used various techniques to close skin wounds (Ellis, 2001). The jaws of termites or beetles were used to bite across wounds and hold skin edges together in India and South America, and in East Africa acacia thorns were stuck along the two wound edges and then plaited together (Ellis, 2001).
Bush, Jim, Bayat, Ardeshir
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Suture Techniques in Rhinoplasty

Clinics in Plastic Surgery, 2010
Suture techniques are an indispensable means to biologically sculpt the cartilage of the nose. Here the authors review their use in tip-plasty and present a 4-suture algorithm that allows for simple, complete control in sculpting the shape of all nasal tips in primary rhinoplasty. After a standard cephalic trim of the lateral crus leaving it 6 mm wide,
Edward Buchanan   +2 more
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Releasable Suture Technique

Journal of Glaucoma, 2008
Releasable scleral flap sutures have been effectively used with trabeculectomy to provide a safer postoperative course. This review will assess the indications for using releasable sutures, with the consideration of their advantages and disadvantages, after trabeculectomy.A review of the literature provided the most common releasable suture techniques ...
Daniela S Monteiro de Barros   +3 more
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Transcorneal Suture Techniques

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1978
To the Editor. —The tragedy of the case reported by Abbott and Spencer and entitled: "Epithelialization of the Anterior Chamber After Transcorneal (McCannel) Suture," (Arch Ophthalmol 96:482-484, 1978), should alert us all to the dangers inherent in any technique in which inadequate wound closure may be compounded by a through-and-through seton, such ...
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Suture Technique of Otoplasty

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1969
THE reduction of protruding ears by the correction of the absent or underdeveloped antihelical fold has been the objective of many techniques dating back to the one described by Luckett 1 in 1910. In this procedure cartilage is excised along the antihelix, and the antihelical fold is then created by suturing together the conchal and scaphal cartilages.
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A Technique for Extracorporeal Suturing

Journal of Laparoendoscopic Surgery, 1992
Advances in laparoscopic surgical procedures will be facilitated by the ability to perform suturing efficiently and effectively. A simple technique of extracorporeal suturing is described, which permits rapid and reliable knot placement for a wide variety of laparoscopic procedures.
openaire   +3 more sources

Adjustable Suture Technique

2015
The adjustable suture technique allows for changing the muscle position in the immediate postoperative period, while the patient is awake. Therefore, this technique has the theoretical advantage of allowing fine tuning of ocular alignment. Unfortunately, fine tuning must be done within the first 24–48 h after the procedure, when the muscle function has
Yi Ning J. Strube, Kenneth W. Wright
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Special Suture Technique

2020
Triangular 3-D suture is particularly suitable for sutures of triangular flaps in cleft lip. [1]
Jian-min Yao, Wei-qiang Tan
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