Thursday, September 19, 2019
Microsurgery: Sewing Blood Vessels and Nerves Back Together :: Health Medicine
Microsurgery:  Sewing Blood Vessels and Nerves Back Together        A man came into the emergency ward at one o'clock. His thumb came in an  hour later. The surgeon's job: get them back together.    The successful re-attaching of fingers to hand requires long hours of  painstaking work in microsurgery. In the operating room , the surgeon  doesn't stand, but sits in a chair that supports her body. Her arm is  cradled by a pillow. Scalpels are present as are other standard surgical  tools, but the suture threads are almost invisible, the needle thinner  than a human hair. And all the surgical activity revolves around the  most important instument, the microscope.    The surgeon will spend the next few hours looking through the microscope  at broken blood vessels and nerves and sewing them back together again.  The needles are so thin that they have to be held with needlenosed  jeweller's forceps and will sew together nerves that are as wide as the  thickness of a penny. To make such a stitch, the surgeon's hands will  move no more than the width of the folded side of a piece of paper seen  end on!    Imagine trying to sew two pieces of spaghetti together and you'll have  some idea of what microsurgery involves.    Twenty-five years ago, this man's thumb would have been lost. But in the  1960s, surgeon's began using microscopes to sew what previously had been  almost invisible  blood vessels and nerves in limbs. Their sewing  technique had been developed on large blood vessels over a half century  earlier but could not be used in microsurgery until the needles and  sutures became small enough. The surgical technique, still widely used  today, had taken the frustrating unreliability out of sewing slippery,  round-ended blood vessels by ingeniously turning them into triangles. To  do this, a cut end of a blood vessel was stitched at three equidistant  points and pulled slightly apart to give an anchored, triangular shape.  This now lent itself to easier, more dependable stitching and paved the  way for microsurgery where as many as twenty stitches will have to be made  in a blood vessel three millimetres thick. The needle used for this can  be just 70 millimetres wide, only ten times the width of a human blood  cell.    All this technology is focused on getting body parts back together again  successfully. The more blood vessels reattached, the better the survival  chances for a toe or a finger. The finer the nerve resection, the better  the feeling in a damaged part of the face, or control in a previously  useless arm. But the wounded and severed body part must be treated    					    
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