2. Introduction
• Pre-operative planning - important!
for optimal cosmetic and functional result
healing process wound contraction and scarring - may
compromise function and appearance
• Goals
to re-establish functional soft tissue structural support
to give the most natural aesthetic appearance with minimal
distortion
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3. Principles of Wound Incision
• First priority - maintain a sterile and aseptic technique to
prevent infection.
THE LENGTH AND DIRECTION OF INCISION - to afford sufficient
operating space and optimum exposure
the direction of wound naturally heal is from side-to-side, not end-toend
the arrangement of tissue fibers in the area to be dissected will vary
with tissue type
the best cosmetic results when incision made to the direction of
tissue fibers
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4. Principles of Wound Incision
• Relaxed Skin Tension Lines (Langer’s line)
Is the skin lines oriented perpendicular to the
direction of the underlying muscle fibers
determined by examination of patient’s natural
skin creases at rest
orientation of the final scar parallel to or within a
natural skin crease gives a superior cosmetic
result.
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5. Principles of Wound Incision
• Dissection technique
clean incision should be made with one stroke or evenly
applied pressure on the scalpel
preserve integrity of as many of underlying structures
as possible
• Fusiform excision
performed with longitudinal axis running parallel to
RSTL
the length should be 4 times with the width of the defect
to produce an accurate coaptation of skin edges
without dog ear formation.
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6. Principles of Wound Incision
• Dog ears
areas of redundant skin and subcutaneous tissue resulting from a
wound margin being longer on one side than the other
dealt with either by
incremental oblique placement of sutures to redistribute the tension across
the wound
fusiform excision of the dog ear with lengthens the scar considerably
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7. Principles of Wound Incision
removal of a ‘dog ear’
• skin defect is sutured until the “dog
ear” becomes apparent
• the “dog ear” is defined with a skin
hook and is incised round the base
• excess skin is removed and the skin is
sutured
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8. Principles of Wound Incision
• Tissue handling
minimum tissue trauma promotes faster healing
surgeon must handle all tissues very gently - and as little as possible
retractors should be placed with care to avoid excessive pressure,
since tension can cause serious complications
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9. Principles of Wound Incision
HAEMOSTASIS - allows surgeon to work in as clear a field as
possible with greater accuracy. Without adequate control,
bleeding may interfere with the surgeon’s view of underlying
structures.
also to prevent formation of postoperative hematomas
collection of blood (hematomas) or fluid (seromas) can prevent direct
apposition of tissue
these collections provide an ideal culture medium for microbial
growth serious infection
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10. Principles of Wound Incision
avoid excessive tissue damage while clamping of ligating a vessel of
tissue. Mass ligation necrosis, tissue death and prolonged healing
time
• Maintaining moisture in tissues
during long procedures irrigate wound with normal saline, or
cover exposed surfaces with saline-moistened gauze to prevent
tissue from drying out
• Removal of necrotic tissue and foreign materials
adequate debridement of all devitalized tissue and removal foreign
materials
presence of foreign materials - increases possibility of infection
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11. Principles of Wound Incision
• Basic Surgical Skills of Wound Incision
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
mark out important landmarks
add cross hatches with the marking pen for accurate wound closure later
apply gentle traction to the skin to avoid wrinkles
apply enough pressure to the scalpel to cut through to subcutaneous fat with one
stroke
v.
always cut toward you in one motion
vi. do not use a sawing motion
vii. focus your attention on the segment already cut in order to continue in a straight line
and to adjust the required pressure
viii. avoid numerous cuts in different planes
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12. Principles of Wound Closure
Goal: “approximate, not strangulate”
CHOICE OF CLOSURE MATERIALS - proper closure material will
allow surgeon to approximate tissue with a little trauma as
possible, and with enough precision to eliminate dead space
•Suture Materials - generally categorized by three characteristics:
Absorbable vs. non-absorbable
Natural vs. synthetic
Monofilament vs. multifilament
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13. Principles of Wound Closure
i.
Absorbable suture - degraded and eventually eliminated (e.g. cat
gut, vicryl, monocryl)
ii.
Non-absorbable suture - not degraded, permanent (e.g. prolene,
nylon, stainless steel)
iii. Natural suture - biological origin; may cause intense inflammatory
reaction (e.g. cat gut, chromic, silk)
iv. Synthetic suture - synthetic polymers; do not cause intense
inflammatory reaction (e.g. vicryl, monocryl, nilon)
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14. Principles of Wound Closure
v. Monofilament suture - grossly appears as single strand of suture
material; all fibers run parallel
ties smoothly
e.g. monocryl, prolene, nylon
vi. Multifilament suture - fibers are twisted or braided together
greater resistance in tissue
e.g. vicryl (braided), chromic (twisted), silk (braided)
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15. Principles of Wound Closure
• Cellular response to foreign materials
whenever foreign materials such as sutures are implanted in tissue,
the tissue reacts - depending on type of material implanted
• more marked if complicated by infection, allergy, trauma
tissue will deflect passage of needle and suture edema of the skin
and subcutaneous tissue discomfort during recovery, as well as
scarring secondary to ischaemic necrosis
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16. Principles of Wound Closure
Some of the Suturing Techniques
i. simple interrupted stitch - single stitches,
individually knotted
used for uncomplicated laceration repair and wound
closure
i. continuous stitch - allows more rapid wound closure
carries the risk of complete wound opening if the suture breaks
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17. Principles of Wound Closure
iii. horizontal mattress stitch - provides added
strength in fascial closure; also used in calloused skin
(e.g. palms and soles)
iv. vertical mattress stitch - affords precise
approximation of skin edges with eversion
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18. Principles of Wound Closure
v. subcuticular stitch - intradermal horizontal bites
allow suture to remain for a longer period of time
without development of crosshatch scarring
better cosmetic result
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19. Principles of Wound Closure
• Elimination of dead space in the wound
dead space in wound
this is critical to healing!!
results from separation of wound edges which have not been
closely approximated, or from air trapped between layers of
tissue
if the needle is not placed perpendicular to the skin, it can
create dead-space, while unequal bites will create poor
apposition
collection of blood or serum ideal medium for microbial
growth infection
drain insertion or pressure dressing application may help to
eliminate dead space in wound
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20. Principles of Wound Closure
• Closing with sufficient tension - to prevent exaggerated patient’s
discomfort, ischaemia, tissue necrosis during healing
sutures must be placed tight enough to seal the wounds, but loose
enough as to not strangulate the wounds edges and create tissue
necrosis and increased scarring
the deep layer is used to minimize tension on the superficial layer
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21. Principles of Wound Closure
• Stress placed upon the wound after surgery
to prevent suture disruption
e.g. abdominal fascia will be placed under excessive tension after
surgery if patient strains to cough, vomit, void, defecate
• Immobilization of wound
adequate immobilization of the approximated wound, but not
mandatory for the entire anatomic part
for efficient healing and minimal scar formation
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22. Principles of Wound Closure
• Factors influencing surgical wound closure
local factors
tight suturing effect vascularity necrosis and wound breakdown
overuse electrocoagulation excessive bleeding and hematoma formation
creating dead space focus for infection
systemic factors
age (>65), nutritional status, male, long term steroid may lead to wound
dehiscence
smoking, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis impaired microcirculation
• obesity reduced tissue oxygenation, increased subcutaneous dead space
more susceptible to haematoma and seroma formation infection