Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Does buried knot sutures help cat gums heal after tooth removal
By Klim, Emilia Barbara et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2025·Stomavet Warszawa·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effect of a buried knot in the healing process of dental extraction sites: a prospective study in cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 40 cats undergoing dental extractions had their wounds stitched using two different methods: one with a buried knot and one without. The cats were checked at 2, 4, and 6 weeks after surgery for signs of healing, such as swelling, bleeding, and pain. The results showed that the buried-knot technique led to less swelling, bleeding, and pain compared to the other method. This suggests that using a buried knot for stitches can help cats heal better after dental work.
People also search for: cat dental extraction recovery · cat dental surgery stitches · why is my cat's mouth swollen after dental work
Abstract
ObjectivesThis study aimed to evaluate the effect of the buried-knot suture technique on gingival wound healing in cats undergoing dental extractions. We hypothesised that a simple buried-knot interrupted suture would provide a healing advantage at the extraction sites.MethodsA prospective, randomised, split-mouth design was used, involving 40 cats sequentially included in the study. Each side of the mouth was sutured using simple interrupted sutures, with and without a buried knot. Healing was assessed at 2, 4 and 6 weeks postoperatively through visual inspection of the maxillary sites. Indicators of wound healing, such as swelling, bleeding on inspection, redness of the wound margins, dehiscence, ulceration, exudate, halitosis, pain on palpation, presence of necrotic tissue, flap instability, suture loosening and entrapment of food debris or foreign bodies were recorded.ResultsAlthough both sutures showed similar mechanical behaviour as assessed through flap stability, dehiscence, suture loosening and the presence of necrotic tissue, the buried-knot technique was significantly associated with reduced inflammatory signs, including less swelling, bleeding on inspection, redness of wound margins, ulceration, exudate, halitosis and pain.Conclusions and relevanceThe findings suggest that simple interrupted sutures with a buried knot provide a healing advantage in gingival wound closure after dental extractions in cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40079506/