Taking out sutures and staples
Attention
- If taken out too soon — wound can open up again
- If left in too long — can be scarring, infection
- See Table 8.2 for suture removal times, staples usually removed after 7–10 days
What you need
- Sterile dressing pack
- Disposable gloves
- Normal saline
- For sutures — fine pointed/curved suture-cutting scissors or sterile stitch-cutter
blade
- For staples — staple removing device
- Adhesive strips for any gaping in wound
- Non-stick dressing and sticky tape, if needed
What you do
- Check
- Wound healed and closed
- Signs of infection
- Where sutures/staples are, how many. Check post op/surgeons instructions
- Not absorbable/dissolvable sutures
- Lay out dressing pack and equipment
- Wash hands, put on disposable gloves
- Clean healed wound with normal saline, remove any dry or dead skin on sutures/staples
- Sutures
- Hold knot securely with forceps
- Cut suture close to skin on side away from knot, then pull out in direction of knot
— Figure 7.67
- Do not pull dirty part of suture through skin
- If sutures small or close to skin — stitch-cutter blade may be easier to use
- Staples
- Slide bottom lip of staple removal device between staple and skin — Figure 7.68
- Bring 2 lips of staple removal device together — Figure 7.69. Staple bends and opens points of staple in skin — Figure 7.70
- Gently lift out staple, put into dressing tray
- First remove every second suture/staple, even if all to be removed
- If wound starts to gape — leave rest of sutures/staples in. Clean and close with adhesive
strips. Leave for another 1–2 days
- After sutures/staples removed — check approximation and healing of skin
- Put adhesive strips across wound if needed
- Dress if needed
- Wound care education