Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien

Standard

Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien. / Thiede, A; Dietz, U; Debus, S.

In: Kongressband. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Chirurgie. Kongress, Vol. 119, 2002, p. 276-82.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Thiede, A, Dietz, U & Debus, S 2002, 'Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien', Kongressband. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Chirurgie. Kongress, vol. 119, pp. 276-82.

APA

Thiede, A., Dietz, U., & Debus, S. (2002). Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien. Kongressband. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Chirurgie. Kongress, 119, 276-82.

Vancouver

Thiede A, Dietz U, Debus S. Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien. Kongressband. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Chirurgie. Kongress. 2002;119:276-82.

Bibtex

@article{b768fd0a2b284b51a453241c15c812b8,
title = "Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien",
abstract = "The surgical suture should be chosen in dependence of the tissue being operated upon and be oriented on the main properties of its chemical composition. Synthetic absorbable suture materials are the first choice in the majority of the procedures, to prevent the formation of foreign body reaction--excepting sites subjected to continuous mechanical stress, for example hernias, orthopedic and vascular surgery. By causing lesser tissue damage and interfilament bacterial transport, monofilament sutures are preferable than multifilament ones. However, knotting monofilament sutures requires additional skills in comparison to multifilament strains, due to their special handling an knotting properties.",
keywords = "Humans, Materials Testing, Needles, Postoperative Complications/etiology, Suture Techniques/instrumentation, Sutures",
author = "A Thiede and U Dietz and S Debus",
year = "2002",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "119",
pages = "276--82",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Klinischer Einsatz--Nahtmaterialien

AU - Thiede, A

AU - Dietz, U

AU - Debus, S

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - The surgical suture should be chosen in dependence of the tissue being operated upon and be oriented on the main properties of its chemical composition. Synthetic absorbable suture materials are the first choice in the majority of the procedures, to prevent the formation of foreign body reaction--excepting sites subjected to continuous mechanical stress, for example hernias, orthopedic and vascular surgery. By causing lesser tissue damage and interfilament bacterial transport, monofilament sutures are preferable than multifilament ones. However, knotting monofilament sutures requires additional skills in comparison to multifilament strains, due to their special handling an knotting properties.

AB - The surgical suture should be chosen in dependence of the tissue being operated upon and be oriented on the main properties of its chemical composition. Synthetic absorbable suture materials are the first choice in the majority of the procedures, to prevent the formation of foreign body reaction--excepting sites subjected to continuous mechanical stress, for example hernias, orthopedic and vascular surgery. By causing lesser tissue damage and interfilament bacterial transport, monofilament sutures are preferable than multifilament ones. However, knotting monofilament sutures requires additional skills in comparison to multifilament strains, due to their special handling an knotting properties.

KW - Humans

KW - Materials Testing

KW - Needles

KW - Postoperative Complications/etiology

KW - Suture Techniques/instrumentation

KW - Sutures

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

C2 - 12704888

VL - 119

SP - 276

EP - 282

ER -