Procedures & Suturing Flashcards

1
Q

Fast-absorbing Gut indications

A
  • epidermis
  • absorbable
  • 5-7 days tensile strength
  • facial lacerations
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2
Q

Vicryl indications

A
  • 2-3 mos absorption
  • tensile strength 3-4 weeks
  • under casts/splints, single layer closure of tongue/oral mucosa, nailbeds
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3
Q

Chromic Gut indiciations

A
  • rapid absorption
  • tensile strength 10-14 days
  • under casts/splints, tongue/oral mucosa, nailbeds
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4
Q

Plain Gut indications

A
  • from sheep/cattle intima
  • tensile strength 5-7 days
  • absorbable
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5
Q

Nylon (ethilon/dermilon) indications

A
  • nonabsorbable
  • high tensile strength
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6
Q

Silk indications

A
  • nonabsorbable
  • not as strong as other synthetics
  • secures percutaneous lines and tubes
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7
Q

polypropylene (prolene, surgilene) indications

A
  • nonabsorbable
  • accommodates stretching
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8
Q

Simple interrupted sutures

A
  • most used in clinic/ED
  • easy, less risk if one suture fails
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9
Q

simple running suture

A
  • rapid percutaneous closure of longer wounds (even distribution of tension)
  • removal or breakage is difficult
  • use for wounds at low risk of infection with edges that easily align
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10
Q

Simple buried suture

A

this also exists, idk lots about it and the slides don’t have any info lol

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11
Q

vertical mattress sutures

A
  • recommended for wounds under tension or inverting edges
  • deep and superficial closure
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12
Q

horizontal mattress suture

A
  • wound eversion in areas of moderate to high tension
  • good for palms and soles but can strangulate tissue if too tight
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13
Q

subcuticular running suture

A
  • used by surgeons for straight lacerations
  • best for linear wounds under little tension
  • good cosmetic outcomes but can separate under tension
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14
Q

Tissue adhesives

A
  • non-mucosal lacerations
  • <8cm in length
  • nail bed repair
  • after deep suture
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15
Q

staples - characteristics

A
  • simple and quick
  • everts edges
  • less tension
  • less inflammation
  • clean, long, linear wounds
  • best on scalp, torso, proximal extremities
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16
Q

Cryotherapy

A

Destruction of tissue by freezing
- convenient, fast
- minimal pain and scarring
- cost effective

  • possible pigment change, destroy hair follicles
17
Q

shave biopsy

A

indicated for lesions that are predominantly epidermal w/o extension to the dermis

18
Q

punch biopsy indication

A

indicated for lesions requiring dermal or subQ tissue for diagnosis (incisional or excisional)

19
Q

excisional biopsy

A

indicated for lesions that are larger and require removal with adequate borders

20
Q

Appropriate lesions for superficial shave biopsy

A
  • warts
  • papillomas
  • skin tags
  • superficial BCC or SCC
  • seborrheic keratoses or actinic keratoses
21
Q
A