Sutures are the stitches doctors, and especially surgeons, use to hold skin, organs, blood vessels and all other tissues of the human body together, after they have been severed in minor or major surgery.

Sutures are designed to help the healing of the body by closely opposing the two sides of a wound to minimize scar formation or to prevent leaking blood, like in vessels. They have to comply with several requirements to be effective. They must be strong (so they do not break), non-toxic and hypoallergenic (to avoid adverse reactions in the body), and flexible (so they can be tied and knotted easily). In addition, they must lack the so called "wick effect", which means that sutures must not allow fluids to penetrate the body through them from outside, what could easily cause infections.

Absorbable and non-absorbable sutures

Absorbable sutures are made of materials which are metabolized inside the body after around three weeks, and then disappear. They are used therefore in many of the inner tissues of the body. In most cases, three weeks is sufficient for the wound to close firmly. The suture is not needed any more, and the fact that it disappears is an advantage, as there is no foreign material left inside the body.

Absorbable sutures were originally made of the intestines of sheep, the so called catgut. The manufacturing process was similar to that of natural musical strings for violins and guitars, and also of natural strings for tennis raquets. Today, natural absorbable sutures are made primarily of bovine intestine. However, the major part of the absorbable sutures used are now made of synthetic fibers, like polyglycolic acid.

Non-absorbable sutures are made of materials which are not metabolized by the body, and are used therefore either on skin wound closure, where the sutures can be removed after a few weeks, or in some inner tissues in which absorbable sutures are not adequate. This is the case, for example, in the heart and in blood vessels, whose rhythmic movement requires a suture which stays longer than three weeks, to give the wound enough time to close. Other organs, like the bladder, contain fluids which make disappear absorbable sutures in only a few days, too early for the wound to heal.

There are several materials used for non-absorbables sutures. The most common is a natural fiber, the silk, which undergoes a special manufacturing process to make it adequate for its use in surgery. Other absorbable sutures are made of artificial fibers, like polyester or nylon. Finally, there are also metal wires used in bone surgery because of their strength and in some other tissues because of the metal's outstanding tolerance by the body.


Atraumatic suture

Traumatic and atraumatic sutures

Traumatic sutures are those which are supplied to the hospital plain, i.e., the suture thread with nothing else. The needle required to use the suture is a separate item. The suture must be thread as it is done when sewing at home.

Atraumatic sutures include a needle on each thread. The advantages of having the needle mounted on the suture are several. The doctor or the nurse do not have to spend time threading the suture on the needle. More important, yet, is the fact that needle and thread form a single, even body. In case of the traumatic suture, the thread comes out of the needle's hole on both sides. When passing through the tissues, this type of suture rips to a certain extent the tissue. With the atraumatic sutures this does not happen. They produce no trauma to the tissue, hence the name "atraumatic". Because of these advantages, the atraumatic sutures are today very widely used.

There are several shapes of atraumatic needles, like straight, half curved, one-third curved, and others. The body of the needle is avaible also in different makes, like circular, with edge on the outer side, with edge on the inner side, and others.

Sizes of sutures

The sutures were originally manufactured ranging from #1 to #6. (To give an idea about these numbers, a #4 suture would be more or less the diameter of a tennis raquet string.) The manufacturing techniques, derived at the beginning from the production of musical strings, did not allow thinner diameters. As the procedures improved, #0 was added to the suture diameters, and later, thinner and thinner threads were manufactured, which were identified as #2/0 to #6/0. This last diameter, thinner than a human hair, was used during the last decades primarily for eye surgery. Now, there are even thinner sutures, down to #10/0. Atraumatic needles are manufactured in most of the shapes for all these sizes.

Surgical staplers

More recently a new product has become popular amongst surgeons, which is an alternative to the classical sutures in some of their applications. It consists of a stapler, similar to those used in the office, which fixes staples into the wounds, holding both sides together. It is used, both, for the skin and for inner tissues. The staples are made of metal and the tolerance by the body is high; in some cases the staples are left inside the body. When used for skin wounds, the staples are removed once the wound is closed. The advantage of this system is that it is faster to use than the sutures, especially when there are large wounds or several wounds to be closed.