It depends on different situations, if too loose to leak then you need a simple suture on leakage sites, or after protamine used, slow rate leakages will stopped
Properly spaced and tensioned sutures compress the tissue together creating a watertight seal. Seeing a skilled surgeon unclamp an anastomosis revealing a watertight seal is genuinely one of the most amazing things I've seen in my medical education
thank you, doctors, as a medical student aiming to become a vascular surgeon in the future, this video was very informative and entertaining.
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Once complete would there be leakage between the stitching, and if so, how long before it stops?
It depends on different situations, if too loose to leak then you need a simple suture on leakage sites, or after protamine used, slow rate leakages will stopped
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Vascular sutures have to be immediately watertight. As soon as the clamps are opened, there should be no leaking. So they are more difficult.
Properly spaced and tensioned sutures compress the tissue together creating a watertight seal. Seeing a skilled surgeon unclamp an anastomosis revealing a watertight seal is genuinely one of the most amazing things I've seen in my medical education
I would like to ask a question: doesn't it always have to be done on the artery from the inside out?
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Exactly, for the inflow artery it has to be done inside out
I didn’t realize arteries were that large. I know it’s not a real one but I would assume they practice on life size replicas.
a great, wonderful, thank you
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great video
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