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  2. Surgical suture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgical_suture

    A surgical suture, also known as a stitch or stitches, is a medical device used to hold body tissues together and approximate wound edges after an injury or surgery. Application generally involves using a needle with an attached length of thread. There are numerous types of suture which differ by needle shape and size as well as thread material ...

  3. Husband stitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Husband_stitch

    The husband stitch or husband's stitch, [1] also known as the daddy stitch, [2] husband's knot and vaginal tuck, [3] is a medically unnecessary and potentially harmful surgical procedure in which one or more additional sutures than necessary are used to repair a woman's perineum after it has been torn or cut during childbirth.

  4. Surgical staple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgical_staple

    It is possible that this is the result of recent advances in suture technology, along with increasingly risk-conscious surgical practice. Certainly modern synthetic sutures are more predictable and less prone to infection than catgut, silk and linen, which were the main suture materials used up to the 1990s.

  5. How an AI learned to stitch up patients by studying surgical ...

    www.aol.com/ai-learned-stitch-patients-studying...

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  6. Is 'the husband stitch' a medical myth? Women speak out ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/husband-stitch-medical...

    Yet “the husband stitch” — when a doctor provides an “extra” stitch while repairing an episiotomy or vaginal tear for the purpose of increasing male pleasure during sexual intercourse ...

  7. Suture materials comparison chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suture_materials...

    For all surgical procedures, especially for tissues that regenerate faster. Subcutaneous, intracutaneous closures, abdominal and thoracic surgeries: PDS is particularly useful where the combination of an adsorbable suture and extended wound support is desirable, pediatric cardiovascular surgery, ophthalmic surgery Contraindications

  8. Catgut suture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catgut_suture

    Catgut Chrome (B Braun) suture is a variant treated with chromic acid salts. This treatment produces roughly twice the stitch-holding time of plain catgut, but greater tissue inflammation occurs. Full tensile strength is extended to 18–21 days. It is brown rather than straw-colored, and has improved smoothness due to the dry presentation of ...

  9. Simple interrupted stitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_interrupted_stitch

    It is known as an interrupted stitch because the individual stitches aren't connected; they are separate. Placing and tying each stitch individually is time-consuming, but this technique keeps the wound together even if one suture fails. [1] It is simple, and relatively easy to place. A surgeon's knot or knots cross the wound perpendicularly ...