1.02 Suturing

Duration 19:44

00:06
hi welcome to the Duke suture skills
00:09
course my name is Michael Zen and on the
00:13
director of the human tissue lab here at
00:14
Duke this course will teach you the
00:17
basics in suture technique we’ll review
00:20
simple suture mattress suture running
00:24
suture and some of the variations and
00:26
proper surgical technique it’s our goal
00:30
that by teaching you proper technique
00:33
you’ll be the best surgical resident or
00:35
surgeon that you can be before we get
00:39
started I’d like to thank G in the
00:40
office at Duke for their generous grant
00:42
that made this video possible
00:52
before get started showing you different
00:55
suture techniques I want to show you a
00:57
basic instrument I this can be used with
00:59
any of the suture techniques that you’ll
01:01
learn once the suture is placed you’ll
01:03
have a short end and then a longer loop
01:06
end your needle driver should be placed
01:09
directly between the two and then we
01:12
will do a surgeon’s knot you’ll wrap
01:14
there’s a longer end twice around the
01:16
needle driver grab the smaller end and
01:20
pull it to the opposite side and what
01:23
will happen when you pull it to the
01:24
opposite side it will square the knot
01:27
and you can see how square the knot sits
01:29
down now because it’s a surgeon’s knot
01:31
it’ll sit unless you pull up on it so
01:35
don’t pull up on it place the needle
01:37
driver between the two the short end and
01:39
the loop end now you’re going to loop it
01:41
around only once
01:42
grab the short end and then bring it to
01:45
the opposite side again squaring the
01:48
knot and don’t pull up on the suture
01:50
until you just get it down and then you
01:52
can tighten it and now it’s locked in
01:54
place I recommend at least three throws
01:56
instrument between bring the small to
01:59
the other side and done some suture
02:01
material you may need four throws
02:03
something maybe like an absorbable
02:04
suture but this is a very basic
02:07
technique it allows you to suture in a
02:10
small place so if multiple people are
02:12
working and will do one more for you
02:14
right here you can suture notice I like
02:17
to keep this short and very short your
02:19
instrument doesn’t move around very much
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then keep the needle driver between the
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two grab the small end pull it to the
02:26
opposite side square and you’re not lock
02:29
it down with that surgeon’s knot don’t
02:31
pull up on it now until you now grab
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this and then pull it through for the
02:35
second time and now it locks down needle
02:39
driver between the two wrap once pull
02:42
through the opposite side and keep that
02:44
knot nice and square square nuts will
02:46
not untie also will look cosmetically
02:49
more appealing
02:57
the first suture we’re going to teach
02:58
you is the simple interrupted suture
03:01
this is the most common suture that
03:03
you’ll be using and wound closure just a
03:05
quick tip on handling a needle you’ll
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notice your needle has a flat portion in
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the middle this is where you grab the
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needle with your needle driver you don’t
03:13
want to grab it at the end where the
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suture comes in or the swedge because
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it’s round and you’ll be unstable never
03:19
grab the needle at the tip because
03:21
you’ll dull it a simple bike will want
03:24
to enter the skin at 90 degrees and
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we’ll go back a few millimeters from the
03:28
skin edge and take a nice bite
03:30
perpendicular to the skin and then on
03:32
the opposite side the same and
03:34
exaggerate that 90 degrees if you take
03:36
it at 90 degrees the skin edges will
03:38
then Evert and come together nicely here
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we’ll set up a instrument tie and you
03:45
can see here again we do three throws
03:49
for nylon and we’ll go ahead and clip
03:51
this this is approximation without
03:55
tension you want to go back a couple
03:57
millimeters for each bite if you go back
04:00
too far it’ll tend to invert the skin
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and we want to avoid that
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so here again exaggerate the 90 degrees
04:07
on each side to make sure that we are
04:09
back the same distance on each side an a
04:13
instrument tie we do a surgeon’s knot
04:15
for the first we cross the suture over
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lay it down nice and flat don’t pull up
04:20
on it until we get the second suture
04:22
down and tighten it and lock it in so
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this is the simple suture it’s something
04:28
that you’ll need to practice a lot to
04:29
master
04:36
next is a simple buried suture this will
04:39
be the main suture you’ll use when
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putting some deeper sutures in before
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putting your skin suture in it’s
04:46
important to bury a suture that we start
04:48
deep and go superficial and end up in
04:52
the dermis without buttonholing the skin
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and then on the opposite side we’re
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gonna do the opposite we’re gonna go
04:58
superficial and then deep and if you
05:01
want your not to bury it’s important
05:03
that both ends are on the same side of
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the loop you see here’s my loop and
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here’s the suture coming out from the
05:10
same side and as we tie this down we’ll
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do an instrument tie but we’ll pull it
05:16
along the length of the wound and
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that’ll help the skin adjust to come
05:19
together and do a nice instrument tie
05:24
and what this does is it takes the
05:26
tension off the skin so that when you go
05:30
to do your skin closure you really can
05:31
work on approximation you can see here
05:33
that helps hold that together let’s go
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ahead and do one more you’re gonna go
05:40
from deep superficial without button
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hauling the skin and then go from
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superficial to deep make sure that
05:49
you’re coming out on the same side of
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the loop
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and we’ll do our instrument tie and
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we’ll pull it along the length of the
05:58
wounds so it’ll allow it to bury come
06:01
back to the other side and back to the
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other side that is our simple
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interrupted buried suture
06:18
next is the vertical mattress suture
06:20
Furcal mattress suture is a very useful
06:23
suture
06:24
especially when wounds are hard to close
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if they’re under a lot of tension or
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maybe there’s a lot of swelling or you
06:29
anticipate swelling
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it’s especially valuable when skin is
06:32
just want to keep rolling in and you
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want to even some we’ll call this the
06:36
far far near near stitch and this is the
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configuration of your suturing we’re
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gonna enter far from the wound travel
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under the skin come out far and then
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come back and go near near essentially
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you’re taking this part of the skin and
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closing it to this part of the skin and
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that’s the power of the suture simple
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suture is really relying on that much
06:54
smaller area so we’ll start far and
06:58
travel under the skin and the same thing
07:02
on the other side and we’ll turn our
07:05
needle around and now we’ll go near and
07:08
near and what you’ll see when we tie
07:13
this down is that this approximates an
07:17
averse to skin edges and we can make it
07:19
just as tight as we want we have our
07:21
granny knot that’ll hold it and we’ll
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square our knots
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so I’ll show you that one more time it’s
07:31
a vertical mattress suture
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far far near there
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and as you tie it down decide how much
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tension you need do you hurt your skin
07:53
edges and hold things together
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and that’s your vertical mattress
08:09
our next suture is the horizontal
08:11
mattress suture it’s configuration is
08:14
horizontal as opposed to our vertical
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mattress you can think of this as two
08:18
simple sutures so in some of that since
08:21
it’s a simple suture it just saves you
08:23
some time it’s important here that you
08:27
stay close to the skin edge and you are
08:28
the same distance on both sides you’ll
08:31
take your bite on one side and then the
08:34
other side and then you’ll turn it
08:37
around and you’ll go back so you’ll end
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up on the same side and there you can
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see our mattress the advantage of this
08:48
is speed compared to doing simple suture
08:50
it doesn’t you’ve ER it as effectively
08:52
sometimes as a vertical mattress here
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you see the way I’ve placed it it’s
08:55
reverting nicely so that’s one example
09:01
of a horizontal technique a variant of
09:05
this is the figure-of-eight suture the
09:08
figure-of-eight suture is the same
09:11
distribution
09:12
you take your simple bite in your simple
09:14
bite but rather than turning the needle
09:16
around you move on and take your next
09:18
simple bite and simple bite what that
09:22
does when you tie this it’ll make a
09:25
small little eight and that’s why it’s
09:27
called a figure of eight suture the
09:29
advantage of this again is speed instead
09:32
of doing two simple sutures and tying
09:34
two simple sutures you’ll see that
09:36
sometimes in some deeper closures like
09:38
fascial closures because again you’re
09:40
grabbing a bunch of tissue to a bunch of
09:42
tissue and therefore it’ll be more
09:45
secure the final variant of the
09:48
horizontal mattress is called a
09:50
half-buried mattress and we use this a
09:52
lot in plastic surgery if there’s an
09:55
area where you don’t want suture holes
09:56
you can actually start your horizontal
09:58
mattress on one side on the opposite
10:01
side stay within the dermis in a
10:04
horizontal fashion in a sub-q ticular
10:06
fashion and then come back on the other
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side again out like you wouldn’t a
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normal horizontal mattress so
10:13
effectively it’s your horizontal
10:14
mattress but half of it is buried tends
10:17
to name the half bare
10:19
horizontal mattress and when you tie
10:21
this here it’ll secure the skin and you
10:25
only have suture marks on one side
10:26
you’ll see we’ll do this at times when
10:29
we have a hair bearing area and an on
10:30
hand bearing area we want to hide the
10:32
suture marks or if it’s a very end or
10:35
tip of a flap and we’re afraid that
10:36
putting sutures in the tip is gonna
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interrupt the blood supply so our three
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variants of a horizontal the straight
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horizontal mattress the figure of eight
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and the half-buried horizontal mattress
10:54
our next stitch is a simple running
10:56
suture this will be the most common
10:58
suture you’ll use to close incisions
11:02
it’s a simple suture so again 90 degrees
11:06
and 90 degrees same bites on both sides
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and you’ll start with an instrument
11:12
tying and try to save length on your
11:15
suture here you also want to measure the
11:19
length of your wound and not make sure
11:21
you’re not working with such a long
11:22
suture that it becomes unruly you’ll
11:28
take you’ll advance on the wound in
11:30
symmetric fashion again trying to take
11:34
90 degree bites each time try to move
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along at the same pace and same amount
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each time almost mimicking a sewing
11:46
machine
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if you move along the same distance each
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time and take the same bites on each
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side have a beautiful cosmetic closure
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people will ask well how much do you
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move along my answer is as long as it’s
12:01
the same on both sides it’ll end up
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looking very nice so be consistent in
12:08
your bites notice I’m exaggerating my 90
12:11
degrees because I want this to e vert I
12:13
if I go too far back on the skin or I
12:15
take too shallow a bite I’ll end up
12:18
inverting the skin and it won’t heal
12:19
correctly notice also I’m just pulling
12:22
up enough on the suture just so that the
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skin edges touch pulling up on the
12:26
suture very hard it’s just ischemic and
12:28
can cause bad scarring I’ll end it with
12:31
a simple little bite at the end make
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sure we have enough tension along the
12:36
incision and then do our instrument tie
12:39
at the end
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and this is a simple running closure
12:56
a variation of the simple
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suture is the simple running locking
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suture we start off the same with simple
13:04
bites and a nice instrument tie
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and this is a very helpful suture when
13:14
you’re sewing under some tension
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especially when you don’t have an
13:18
assistant who can help hold the suture
13:20
for you and follow you you’ll take your
13:24
simple bites again 90 degrees 90 degrees
13:27
you’ve hurt the skin edges but before
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you pull up you’ll make sure and
13:32
actually lock the suture and take your
13:36
simple bite and simple bite and again
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before pulling up the last little bit
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you’ll lock your suture and you can go
13:46
on from here and the beauty of this is
13:48
that you see although it’s loose here it
13:50
is locking back here and so when you’re
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under a lot of tension especially it’ll
13:58
hold for itself
13:59
now sometimes I’ll do a running stitch
14:02
and I don’t plan on doing a running
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locking but at some point in the middle
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of the suture it starts loosening on me
14:08
and then you can just throw in one of
14:09
these locking sutures I always keep it
14:12
nice and tight
14:18
so it’s not a suture necessarily that
14:20
you’ll use primarily because I think for
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scoring purposes you prefer a regular
14:24
suture and I will say also as you become
14:27
more and more expert at suturing you’ll
14:29
be able to control your simple suits
14:31
you’re much better each time locking the
14:35
suture and we’re going to end this with
14:38
a simple stitch
14:45
and again when we tie this we want to
14:47
main to make sure we have good tension
14:48
on the rest of the suture
14:57
and that is our running walking suture
15:07
our next stitch is a running
15:08
subcuticular sutures how do all those
15:11
sutures were teaching you this is
15:13
probably the hardest to master this is
15:15
probably for the most cosmetic closure
15:17
as they’re running within the dermis
15:20
deeply so there’s no sutures on the
15:22
outside at all so you won’t see any of
15:24
the railroad tracking that you would see
15:26
from any other outside sutures this is a
15:30
absorb assuit sure and we will start by
15:32
burying the knot so I’ll go deep in the
15:35
corner away from the skin maybe just a
15:38
very deepest part of the dermis and
15:40
we’ll do our instrument tie and this
15:42
allows the knot to be buried so we can
15:45
suture over it this is important because
15:47
we don’t want knots coming up to the
15:50
skin they can stick out it’s called
15:52
spitting patients do not like it when
15:55
the knots bit now with knot is deep so
15:59
we’re gonna go deep and we’re gonna come
16:00
superficial and that brings us right up
16:02
to the corner and this is where we’re
16:03
gonna start our so particularly run when
16:07
you start to get close to a corner
16:09
definitely recommend smaller bites to
16:10
start see I’m just within the dermis
16:12
horizontal bites need to advance a
16:16
little bit on the other side and take
16:17
another small bite against a wall within
16:20
the dermis
16:20
now with this stitch Simoes asked us how
16:23
much do you advance each time what I
16:24
like to do is to see here with my suture
16:27
where the next bite should be and that’s
16:29
where I’m going to put it so in some
16:31
sense it depends on how much tension
16:33
there is on this wound there’s not a lot
16:35
of tension now we’re gonna start to take
16:38
regular bites on each side I’m trying to
16:39
take the same depth and the same amount
16:41
of tissue each time as we begin to
16:45
advance
16:47
keep pulling everything up and keeping
16:49
tension
16:56
notice I’m not pulling up very tight
16:58
either just getting the skin to
17:00
approximate no buttonholing of the skin
17:04
this is just pure horizontal dermis
17:14
wants to come right there
17:23
can get a good play the dermis
17:38
wants to come right there
17:48
and just like when we started as you
17:51
begin to approach the corner you want to
17:54
stop taking such big bites and start
17:56
going to some smaller bites because you
17:58
really want these skin edges to be well
18:00
approximated at the corner and not
18:02
create any dog ears we also want to bury
18:05
our knot so if we’re on a berry or not
18:07
we have to start thinking about now
18:09
about getting deep with both of the two
18:13
ends that are gonna get tied so at this
18:15
point here I’m superficial and I’m gonna
18:16
go superficial on this side and then
18:19
head deep that’ll get me down just sort
18:24
of where we started down deep and I’m
18:28
going to take one more bite that’s deep
18:31
now I want to tie that and that’ll help
18:36
to bury the knot
18:46
and now what I’m gonna do to help bury
18:48
the knot as well is to cut the short end
18:50
here right on the edge of the knot and
18:52
now take the needle and very that not
18:56
further so I’m gonna pick up here and
18:58
see where that knots going I can come
19:00
out through the skin nearby and just
19:02
simply pull up on this I can just cut it
19:05
flush with the skin that helps the duck
19:08
are not from our suture
19:12
that concludes this course we at Duke
19:15
feel strongly that excellent surgeons
19:17
begin with excellent basic technique and
19:20
I hope you’ve learned some of that
19:21
during this video come back often as you
19:24
begin to perfect your own technique if
19:27
you’d like to learn more about Duke
19:28
Plastic Surgery or the human tissue lab
19:30
here at Duke visit us on the web at
19:33
Plastic Surgery duke.edu

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