Livin' on the MDedge

The road to weight loss is paved with collusion and sabotage


 

This is knot what you were expecting

Physicians who aren’t surgeons probably don’t realize it, but the big thing that’s been getting between the knot-tying specialists and perfect suturing technique all these years is a lack of physics. Don’t believe us? Well, maybe you’ll believe plastic surgeon Samia Guerid, MD, of Lausanne, Switzerland: “The lack of physics-based analysis has been a limitation.” Nuff said.

Alain Herzog / EPFL

That’s not enough for you, is it? Fine, we were warned.

Any surgical knot, Dr. Guerid and associates explained in a written statement, involves the “complex interplay” between six key factors: topology, geometry, elasticity, contact, friction, and polymer plasticity of the suturing filament. The strength of a suture “depends on the tension applied during the tying of the knot, [which] permanently deforms, or stretches the filament, creating a holding force.” Not enough tension and the knot comes undone, while too much snaps the filament.

For the experiment, Dr. Guerid tied a few dozen surgical knots, which were then scanned using x-ray micro–computed tomography to facilitate finite element modeling with a “3D continuum-level constitutive model for elastic-viscoplastic mechanical behavior” – no, we have no idea what that means, either – developed by the research team.

That model, and a great deal of math – so much math – allowed the researchers to define a threshold between loose and tight knots and uncover “relationships between knot strength and pretension, friction, and number of throws,” they said.

But what about the big question? The one about the ideal amount of tension? You may want to sit down. The answer to the ultimate question of the relationship between knot pretension and strength is … Did we mention that the team had its own mathematician? Their predictive model for safe knot-tying is … You’re not going to like this. The best way to teach safe knot-tying to both trainees and robots is … not ready yet.

The secret to targeting the knot tension sweet spot, for now, anyway, is still intuition gained from years of experience. Nobody ever said science was perfect … or easy … or quick.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Lack of food for thought: Starve a bacterium, feed an infection
MDedge Dermatology
Previously unknown viral families hide in the darnedest places
MDedge Dermatology
Living the introvert’s dream: Alone for 500 days, but never lonely
MDedge Dermatology
Drive, chip, and putt your way to osteoarthritis relief
MDedge Dermatology
Medical-level empathy? Yup, ChatGPT can fake that
MDedge Dermatology
Boys may carry the weight, or overweight, of adults’ infertility
MDedge Dermatology
The antimicrobial peptide that even Pharma can love
MDedge Dermatology
People still want their medical intelligence in human form
MDedge Dermatology
Ancient plague, cyclical pandemics … history lesson?
MDedge Dermatology
The enemy of carcinogenic fumes is my friendly begonia
MDedge Dermatology