[go: up one dir, main page]

US2519404A - Sutures - Google Patents

Sutures Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2519404A
US2519404A US568399A US56839944A US2519404A US 2519404 A US2519404 A US 2519404A US 568399 A US568399 A US 568399A US 56839944 A US56839944 A US 56839944A US 2519404 A US2519404 A US 2519404A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
suture
sutures
water
tube
tubing
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US568399A
Inventor
Henry J Rynkiewicz
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Johnson and Johnson
Original Assignee
Johnson and Johnson
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Johnson and Johnson filed Critical Johnson and Johnson
Priority to US568399A priority Critical patent/US2519404A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2519404A publication Critical patent/US2519404A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L17/00Materials for surgical sutures or for ligaturing blood vessels ; Materials for prostheses or catheters
    • A61L17/06At least partially resorbable materials
    • A61L17/08At least partially resorbable materials of animal origin, e.g. catgut, collagen

Definitions

  • This invention relates to surgical sutures and particularly to the composition of the liquid in which sutures are customarily packed or tubed.
  • the invention results from my discovery that the propyl alcohols, either pure or containing small quantities of water, have unexpected properties toward absorbable protein materials, such as animal tissues, which are of advantage in the tubing of absorbable sutures, such as surgical gut.
  • tubing fluid a preserving or conditioning liquid, called tubing fluid
  • xylol and similar anhydrous hydrocarbons have been used for boilable sutures in spite of their known disadvantages among which are irritation of the tissue, stiffness or elastic wiriness of the suture, and the difliculty of removing the tubing fluid from the fibers of the suture, which results in difiiculty in softening or requires prolonged exposure to water or other softening liquids.
  • sutures tubed in the propyl alcohols can be boiled without damage to the suture even when the propyl alcohol contains as much as about 2% water.
  • sutures are prepared in the usual manner including drying and polishing and placing in open glass tubes. I then partially fill the tube with my novel tubing fluid, seal the tube, and subsequently heat it to sterilizing temperature.
  • cording to my invention consists of between about 98% and about 100% of a propyl alcohol, the remainder being water.
  • I can use either normal propyl alcohol or isopropyl alcohol, but I prefer the latter.
  • the propyl alcohols are miscible in water in all proportions, so that the tubing fluid rapidly dilutes and dissolves into the water, giving the water instant access to the fibers. Moreover, the presence of the water produces a suture somewhat more pliable initially than a suture tubed in a completely anhydrous liquid.
  • Another advantage resulting from my invention is the elimination of the irritation caused by traces of previously known hydrocarbons which remain in the suture even after soaking in water. Because these tubing fluids are not miscible in water, undesirable quantities remain in the fibers of the gut. These residual quantities of many tubing fluids, such as xylol, are irritating to human tissue and retard recovery of the patient. The propyl alcohols not only are less irritating, but less of the tubing fluid remains in the suture because of its solubility in water.
  • This is a phenomenon attending stiff sutures, and results from splintering or the suture or breaking of the fibers when sharply bent as in a knot.
  • Boilable sutures must show definite tensile strengths over knots, as rigidly specified by the United States Pharmacopoeia for each size 01' suture. It is required that the sutures show these minimum strengths upon removal from the tube and without conditioning.
  • the stiff suture is tied in a knot and the knotted string pulled to the test value of tension (e. g., 7 pounds for a No.
  • a suture of absorbable proteinaceous-material sealed in a container with a propyl alcohol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.
  • a suture of absorbable proteinaceous material sealed in a container with normal propyl alcohol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about 0% said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.
  • a suture of absorbable proteinaceous material sealed in a container with isopropanol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about 0% said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Surgery (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Vascular Medicine (AREA)
  • Epidemiology (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Materials For Medical Uses (AREA)

Description

Patented Aug. 22,1950
SUTURES Henry J. Rynkicwicz, Bound Brook, N. J assignor to Johnson & Johnson, a corporation of New Jersey No Drawing. Application December 15, 1944,
Serial No. 568,399
3 Claims. (Cl. 128-335.5)
This invention relates to surgical sutures and particularly to the composition of the liquid in which sutures are customarily packed or tubed. The invention results from my discovery that the propyl alcohols, either pure or containing small quantities of water, have unexpected properties toward absorbable protein materials, such as animal tissues, which are of advantage in the tubing of absorbable sutures, such as surgical gut.
In order to provide surgeons with sutures which are sterile and ready to use, it has been the practice to pack the suture in a glass tube containing a preserving or conditioning liquid, called tubing fluid, the tube being sealed hermetically either before or after sterilizing the suture, depending on the nature of the suture and the particular tubing fluid used.
One of the problems attending the use of sutures is the sterilizing of the outside of the tube so that when it is handled to break the tube and remove the suture, the suture will not be contaminated. One method of accomplishing this is to boil the suture tube, or place it in a steam sterilizer before the tube is opened. This requires a tubing fluid which is inert with respect to the suture material at temperatures up to at least 212 F., and usually as high as 250 F. Sutures packed in such tubing fluids are named and labeled boilable. As a matter of fact, when boilable tubing fluid is used, the suture is customarily sealed in the tube and thereafter sterilized by heating for an hour or more to a temperature of about 315 F. Therefore, boilable tubing fluids should be inert to the suture material at this temperature.
The most extensively used sutures are made from animal tissues, especially the sub-mucosa lining of the small intestines of sheep (called surgical gut). Previous attempts to tube boilable sutures in alcoholic or other solutions containing water have been unsuccessful because previously known tubing fluids containing even small quantities of water as well as previously known alcoholic tubing fluids (containing ethanol or methanol) ruin the gut at boiling temperatures. Thus xylol and similar anhydrous hydrocarbons have been used for boilable sutures in spite of their known disadvantages among which are irritation of the tissue, stiffness or elastic wiriness of the suture, and the difliculty of removing the tubing fluid from the fibers of the suture, which results in difiiculty in softening or requires prolonged exposure to water or other softening liquids.
I have discovered that sutures tubed in the propyl alcohols can be boiled without damage to the suture even when the propyl alcohol contains as much as about 2% water.
In accordance with my invention, sutures are prepared in the usual manner including drying and polishing and placing in open glass tubes. I then partially fill the tube with my novel tubing fluid, seal the tube, and subsequently heat it to sterilizing temperature. The tubing fluid, ac-
cording to my invention, consists of between about 98% and about 100% of a propyl alcohol, the remainder being water. I can use either normal propyl alcohol or isopropyl alcohol, but I prefer the latter.
When the suture is to be used, the tube is broken and the suture soaked in sterile water or is placed in a wet sterile towel to render it sufflciently pliable for use. In prior practice, as much as ten minutes exposure to moisture might be required to render the suture sufficiently pliable. This was partly due to the presence of the previously known boilable fluids, which were not miscible with water, and which acted somewhat as waterproofing impregnants. This prolonged exposure not only caused undesirable delay, but subjected the suture to the risk of contamination. I have found that sutures tubed in a propyl alcohol, or a solution having a concentration above about 98% propyl alcohol, are softened after exposure to moisture of only about half the time formerly required. The propyl alcohols are miscible in water in all proportions, so that the tubing fluid rapidly dilutes and dissolves into the water, giving the water instant access to the fibers. Moreover, the presence of the water produces a suture somewhat more pliable initially than a suture tubed in a completely anhydrous liquid.
Another advantage resulting from my invention, is the elimination of the irritation caused by traces of previously known hydrocarbons which remain in the suture even after soaking in water. Because these tubing fluids are not miscible in water, undesirable quantities remain in the fibers of the gut. These residual quantities of many tubing fluids, such as xylol, are irritating to human tissue and retard recovery of the patient. The propyl alcohols not only are less irritating, but less of the tubing fluid remains in the suture because of its solubility in water.
Still another advantage, resulting from using propyl alcohols, is the elimination of the brashy knots, which are experienced with previously known boilable sutures. This is a phenomenon attending stiff sutures, and results from splintering or the suture or breaking of the fibers when sharply bent as in a knot. Boilable sutures must show definite tensile strengths over knots, as rigidly specified by the United States Pharmacopoeia for each size 01' suture. It is required that the sutures show these minimum strengths upon removal from the tube and without conditioning. Where the stiff suture is tied in a knot and the knotted string pulled to the test value of tension (e. g., 7 pounds for a No. 1 gut having a diameter between 16.0 and 19.0 mils), the small fibers or the gut at and near the outside are apt to break. This weakens the gut and causes it to fail the test. Gut tubed in the propyl alcohols, for some reason not fully understood, has less brashy knots than gut tubed instandard boilable fluids. The fibers at the outside break less and the sutures show improved knot tensile strength. The reduction oi brashiness seems to improve with increase of water content up to the limit of water content which permits boiling of the suture, namely about 2%.
I claim:
1. As an article of manufacture, a suture of absorbable proteinaceous-material, sealed in a container with a propyl alcohol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.
2. As an article of manufacture, a suture of absorbable proteinaceous material, sealed in a container with normal propyl alcohol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about 0% said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.
4 3. As an article or manufacture, a suture of absorbable proteinaceous material, sealed in a container with isopropanol between about 98% and about 100% and water between about 2% and about 0% said suture being stable at temperatures up to 100 C.
HENRY J. RYNKIEWICZ.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are oi record in the file or this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,168,173 Davis Jan. 11, 1916 2,394,054 Hall Feb. 5, 1946 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 339,957 France June 5, 1906 (Addition to No. 5,657) 89,540 Germany' Nov. 7, 1896 o'rmmcns

Claims (1)

1. AS AN ARTICLE OF MANUFACTURE, A SUTURE OF ABSORBABLE PROTEINACEOUS MATERIAL, SEALED IN A CONTAINER WITH A PROPYL ALCOHOL BETWEEN ABOUT 98% AND ABOUT 100% AND WATER BETWEEN ABOUT 2% AND ABOUT 0% SAID SUTURE BEING STABLE AT TEMPERATURES UP TO 100*C.
US568399A 1944-12-15 1944-12-15 Sutures Expired - Lifetime US2519404A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US568399A US2519404A (en) 1944-12-15 1944-12-15 Sutures

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US568399A US2519404A (en) 1944-12-15 1944-12-15 Sutures

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2519404A true US2519404A (en) 1950-08-22

Family

ID=24271125

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US568399A Expired - Lifetime US2519404A (en) 1944-12-15 1944-12-15 Sutures

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2519404A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2739704A (en) * 1953-07-31 1956-03-27 Davis & Geck Inc Tertiary butyl alcohol as a tubing fluid
US3043067A (en) * 1953-08-04 1962-07-10 American Cyanamid Co Suture package
US3435825A (en) * 1962-12-17 1969-04-01 Kendall & Co Plastic collagen sutures
US5584857A (en) * 1994-11-14 1996-12-17 United States Surgical Corporation Suture coating and tubing fluid
US5584858A (en) * 1994-11-14 1996-12-17 United States Surgical Corporation Tubing fluid
US5925065A (en) * 1993-06-11 1999-07-20 United States Surgical Corporation Coated gut suture
US5939191A (en) * 1993-06-11 1999-08-17 United States Surgical Corporation Coated gut suture

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE89540C (en) *
FR339957A (en) * 1904-01-27 1904-06-23 Justin Jean Baptiste Triollet Method and apparatus for sterilizing catgut
US1168173A (en) * 1915-04-20 1916-01-11 Charles T Davis Sealed container of surgical ligatures and method of preparing same.
US2394054A (en) * 1941-03-27 1946-02-05 Kendall & Co System for tubing surgical materials

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE89540C (en) *
FR339957A (en) * 1904-01-27 1904-06-23 Justin Jean Baptiste Triollet Method and apparatus for sterilizing catgut
US1168173A (en) * 1915-04-20 1916-01-11 Charles T Davis Sealed container of surgical ligatures and method of preparing same.
US2394054A (en) * 1941-03-27 1946-02-05 Kendall & Co System for tubing surgical materials

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2739704A (en) * 1953-07-31 1956-03-27 Davis & Geck Inc Tertiary butyl alcohol as a tubing fluid
US3043067A (en) * 1953-08-04 1962-07-10 American Cyanamid Co Suture package
US3435825A (en) * 1962-12-17 1969-04-01 Kendall & Co Plastic collagen sutures
US5925065A (en) * 1993-06-11 1999-07-20 United States Surgical Corporation Coated gut suture
US5939191A (en) * 1993-06-11 1999-08-17 United States Surgical Corporation Coated gut suture
US5584857A (en) * 1994-11-14 1996-12-17 United States Surgical Corporation Suture coating and tubing fluid
US5584858A (en) * 1994-11-14 1996-12-17 United States Surgical Corporation Tubing fluid

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2519404A (en) Sutures
GB427106A (en) Threads, ribbons, tubes and the like from polyvinyl compounds
US2576006A (en) Methods of forming shaped fibrin products
Robertson A method of citrated blood transfusion
US3413079A (en) Alkanoic acid and hydroxy alkanoic acid salt softening of tanned collagen strands
US2524772A (en) Sutures
Jenkins et al. Absorption of surgical gut (catgut): III. Duration in the tissues after loss of tensile strength
GB638257A (en) Improvement in packaged suture tubes
US2394054A (en) System for tubing surgical materials
US2817437A (en) Sterilization of collagenous sutures with epoxides
US2694487A (en) Flexibility of catgut sutures
US2253287A (en) Suture and method of packaging and sterilizing the same
US1168173A (en) Sealed container of surgical ligatures and method of preparing same.
US2739704A (en) Tertiary butyl alcohol as a tubing fluid
US1168174A (en) Process for sterilizing and preserving surgical ligatures.
US2738059A (en) Packaged surgical sutures and method of preparing same
JPH0638848B2 (en) Surgical thread yarn and method of manufacturing the same
US693138A (en) Method of preparing and inclosing surgical ligatures.
US2742148A (en) Mixtures of alcohols as tubing fluids for non-boilable catgut
US514558A (en) Richard kny
US2215453A (en) Method for the manufacture of sterilized catgut
US1564983A (en) Surgical catgut thread
CN105724368A (en) Preservation method of willow breeding material
US2796984A (en) Sutures
US1202931A (en) Surgical suture and ligature and method of preparing same.