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Published in: Surgery Today 12/2012

01-12-2012 | Original Article

Optimal suture materials for contaminated gastrointestinal surgery: does infection influence the decrease of the tensile strength of sutures?

Authors: Yoichi Tanaka, Sotaro Sadahiro, Kenji Ishikawa, Toshiyuki Suzuki, Akemi Kamijo, Seiki Tazume, Masanori Yasuda

Published in: Surgery Today | Issue 12/2012

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Abstract

Purpose

Suture materials are selected based on the following factors: absorbable/non-absorbable, monofilament/multifilament, duration with sufficiently high tensile strength, and the tissue to be sutured. Absorbable sutures are hydrolyzed in tissues. However, little is known about the influence of infection on the hydrolysis and decrease in the tensile strength.

Methods

Four kinds of sutures, i.e., non-absorbable multifilament silk, non-absorbable monofilament polypropylene (Prolene®), absorbable multifilament polyglactin 910 (Vicryl®), and absorbable monofilament polydioxanone (PDS®) were implanted in the back of rats. A suspension of Escherichia coli + Bacteroides fragilis or saline was injected subcutaneously into the contaminated and clean condition groups, respectively. The sutures were removed 1, 2, 4 or 8 weeks after the implantation.

Results

There was significantly more severe inflammation macroscopically for the silk sutures under the contaminated conditions (p = 0.03), however, no significant differences were observed among the other three sutures. All 4 kinds of sutures showed a reduction of the tensile strength over time. There were no significant differences in the magnitude of reduction between both the clean and contaminated conditions for any of the sutures.

Conclusions

The reduction of the tensile strength with time did not differ significantly between sutures exposed to contaminated and clean conditions, even for the absorbable sutures.
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Metadata
Title
Optimal suture materials for contaminated gastrointestinal surgery: does infection influence the decrease of the tensile strength of sutures?
Authors
Yoichi Tanaka
Sotaro Sadahiro
Kenji Ishikawa
Toshiyuki Suzuki
Akemi Kamijo
Seiki Tazume
Masanori Yasuda
Publication date
01-12-2012
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
Surgery Today / Issue 12/2012
Print ISSN: 0941-1291
Electronic ISSN: 1436-2813
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00595-011-0112-6

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