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Suturing in Dental Surgery Hasanain Alani, 18’ July 21, 2016

Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

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Page 1: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Suturing in Dental Surgery

Hasanain Alani, 18’July 21, 2016

Page 2: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Overview• Objectives• Review of suturing materials• Techniques used in Oral Surgery

Page 3: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

What is Suturing?• The primary objective is to position

and secure surgical flaps to promote optimal healing.

• When performed properly, healing by primary intention occurs.

• Performed intra- and extra-orallyoAchieve functional and esthetic

resultsoDecreasing the potential for

postoperative infections occurance

Page 4: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Suture Armamentarium

• Needle Holder Suture scissors

Adson forceps Suture Needle

Page 5: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Suture Materials: Needle

A surgical needle has 3 parts: the needle point, the needle body, and the swaged (press-fit) end The most commonly used are the 3/8 and ½ circle needles.

The common shapes:• ROUND

o Less traumatic than the other two, requires more force

• REVERSE CUTTING: o The sharp TIP is DOWNWARD. o More safe when working in delicate tissue.

• Cuttingo Sharp TIP is UPWARD. o Extra sharp tip in is more likely to tear the tissue.

Page 6: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Suture Materials: Thread

• Propertieso Tensile strengtho Biocompatibilityo Ease of tyingo Least tissue irritation and reactiono Diameter and sizeo Coefficient of friction

• Classificationo Origino Structureo Duration

Page 7: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Durability• Resorbable

o Natural• Plain gut• Chromic gut

o Synthetic• Polyglycolic acid (PGA)• Poliglecaprone 25

How do sutures resorb?o Antigenic Reactiono Acidic Environment

NonresorbableSilkPolyester

Monofilament type ‘nylon’Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)

Page 8: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Silk Sutures• This is the most universally used material in

dentistry

• Advantages:o Inexpensiveo Easy to handle and tie

• Disadvantages:o It must be removedo It is multifilament

• When Should we avoid using silk? And what are the alternatives?

Page 9: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Example• Patient diagnosed with bulimia presented to

OS clinic for #30 extraction, and it was determined that the flap edges need to be positioned by sutures.

• What is the minimum coaptation time for tissue flaps?

• Synthetic vs Organic thread?

• Fast Absorbing Polyglycolic Acid (PGA-FA)

Page 10: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Diameter• Thread materials range in diameter from 1

to 10, and the higher number corresponds to the thinner, more delicate thread.

• periodontal plastic surgery: 5–0 for soft tissue grafts, 4-0 mucoperiosteal grafts and implants surgery.

Page 11: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Knots• Art of suturing!• An appropriate type of

know should be used for the specific suture material

• Slip knot: used with silk, chromic or plain gut suture

• Surgeon’s knot: used with synthetic resorbable and other nonresorbable synthetic suture materials to prevent untimely knot untying.

Page 12: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Techniques• Interrupted Suture• Simple Continuous Suture• External Horizontal Mattress Suture• External Vertical Mattress Suture• Figure-of-eight Suture• Criss-cross Suture

Page 13: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Interrupted Suture• Do the pass technique, two loops

around the needle holder, then grab the tail and do the knot.

• Indications: Single tooth extraction, third molar extraction flap, biopsies, implants, ..etc.

• Advantages: It is the most commonly used technique, preferred in urgent situations and it is easy to remove. Failure of one is inconsequential of the others.

• Disadvantages: It does not bring all surfaces into contact and less supportive for healing of the flap margins.

Page 14: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Simple Continuous Suture

• Start it with simple interrupted suture• Then you cut the tail off and leave that last

piece loose then you can do your loops.

• Indications: Bone graft, removal of mandibular tori, tuberosity reduction and where esthetics are not important

• Advantages: It is very easy to produce and offers a more water tight closure

• Disadvantages: if you cut one part of it, you lost all of it.

Page 15: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Horizontal Mattress Suture

• The strongest type of sutures, very far away (8 mm from the edge)

• Indications: large distances between tissues, bone grafts and implants, and closure of extraction socket.

• Advantages: Good for hemostasis, less prominent scarring.

• Disadvantages: Leave a gap between flaps and it is difficult to remove.

Page 16: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Vertical Mattress Suture

• The far far, near near technique.

• Indications: where the wound edges tend to evert

• Advantages: greater closure strength and better distribution of wound tension

• Disadvantages: Scar formation and the formation of edge necrosis.

Page 17: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Figure of 8 sutures• Pattern goes 1-2-3-4-1

• Indication: Extraction socket closure, adaptation of ginigival papilla around the tooth, and bone graft placement in socket

• Advantages: Rapid closure• Disadvantages: Due to its orientation, it is difficult to

remove and it leaves a significant amount of suture threads inside the socket.

Page 18: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

General Principles• 1- Grasp the needle 2/3 front, and 1/3 behind

the needle driver.• 2- The needle should pass perpendicular to the

tissue• 3- The needle should pass at an equal depth

and distance on both sides of the wound• 4- Pass from the thinner to the thicker tissue• 5- The suture should never be closed under

tension (no blanch).• 6- The knot should be placed at 2-3 mm from

the incision• 7- Suture should pass over the dental papilla,

not the empty socket.

Page 19: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Conclusion• Due to the daily surgical procedures carried

by dentists, a greater knowledge of suturing armamentarium and materials and is needed.

• The success of technique-sensitive surgeries depends on the clinician’s knowledge and skills to close the wound and achieve optimal healing

• The innovations in suturing materials decrease the potential for postoperative infections.

Page 20: Suturing techniques involved in dental surgery

Refrences• 1- Silverstein, Lee H., Gregori M. Kurtzman,

and Peter C. Shatz. "Suturing for optimal soft-tissue management." Journal of Oral Implantology 35.2 (2009): 82-90.

• 2- Chu, Chih-Chang, J. Anthony Von Fraunhofer, and Howard P. Greisler, eds.Wound closure biomaterials and devices. CRC Press, 1996.

• 3- Int J Periodontics Restorative Dent. 1998 Oct;18(5):474-87. Oral tissue reactions to suture materials.Selvig KA(1), Biagiotti GR, Leknes KN, Wikesjö UM.