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Title: [History of healing; wound suturing]. Author: Kuijjer PJ. Journal: Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd; 1998 Feb 28; 142(9):473-9. PubMed ID: 9562762. Abstract: The history of wound suturing reflects that of surgery itself. In wound treatment, which encloses the technique of suturing as well as suturing materials, wound suturing plays a prominent role. In ancient India, Egypt and the Greek and Roman societies wound treatments as well as suturing techniques and instruments were developed that strongly resemble those in our days. Catgut and silk are known since antiquity. Hardly any progress is noted up to the nineteenth century. The debate on closed or open wound treatment has never stopped. The improvement of catgut by Lister started in 1860. In the 19th century prototypes of mechanical suturing instruments (staplers) were developed. They were introduced into clinical practice in the early decades of the 20th century. The greatest progress in wound suturing started after World War II with the introduction of advanced semiautomatic stapler machinery and with the manufacture of synthetic non-resorbable and resorbable fibres. They have revolutionized surgery and were instrumental in developing new fields (microsurgery).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]