Horizontal Mattress Suture Continuous
This type of suture tends to be performed using non absorbable suture material with the sutures removed 10 14 days on average after wound closure however typically less than this for closures on the head and neck.
Horizontal mattress suture continuous. Horizontal half buried mattress or 3 corner sutures. This makes it ideal for holding together fragile skin as well as skin under high tension such as the distant edges of a large laceration or as the initial holding suture in complicated repairs. This suture may also be used as a stay stitch for temporary approximation of.
The continuous version of the horizontal matrix suture transmits the tension of the wound along the entire suture line. The horizontal mattress suturing technique is the only technique in which the suture material never contacts the lumen. Performing a horizontal mattress suture.
It s most useful for high tension wounds especially when the edges are fragile or frayed. The continuous suture technique begins with a simple suture at the end of wound which is knotted. Horizontal mattress suturing is a fairly useful back pocket trick to have in your repair arsenal.
Mattress sutures are used especially when skin edges must be closed under tension as they achieve good skin eversion which aids wound healing and produces less prominent scaring. The sutures are then sutured parallel to each other along the wound at various millimetric distances. The horizontal mattress suture is useful for wounds under high tension because it provides strength and wound eversion.
The horizontal mattress stitch is a suture technique used to close wounds. The corner stitch a variation of the. Vertical and horizontal mattress sutures allow for skin edges to be closed under tension when wound edges have to be brought together over a distance.
Truth told i don t personally use these sutures often for primary repair as they don t create as meticulous of wound edge apposition as. Gently lift the skin with the forceps and pierce the skin surface with the needle perpendicular 90 to the skin at approximately 4mm from the wound edge if the wound is under tension a bigger needle bite may be required. Horizontal mattress sutures closing the gap.