Modern suture is supplied pre-packaged and sterilised. All the details required for suture selection are listed on the outside of the packet. These details include:
- The gauge: this is the diameter of the material, the metric number represents the diameter of the suture in tenths of a millimetre. The thinner the gauge, the lower the material’s tensile strength. This is measured as knot pull strength. A basic rule of thumb is that the material should not be stronger than the tissue that it is holding.
- Thickest: 8 metric (for which the imperial gauge equivalent is 6)
- Finest: 0.1 metric (for which there is no imperial gauge equivalent, 0.2 = 9/0)
- The length
- Monofilament or braided
- Swaged on material: this indicates that the suture is attached into the end of the needle (the needle has no eye) making it easier to draw through tissue, causing minimum trauma and using a minimum of time – as the needle doesn’t have to be threaded.
- The needle:
- Cross-section: cutting, taper cut, reverse cutting or round-bodied.
- Shape: curved, half curved, straight.
- Length: in mm.
- Diameter.
Ethicon Ltd1, produces an information booklet which has more comprehensive details regarding the suture materials and needles they manufacture and suture techniques.