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erronis

(22,482 posts)
Thu Dec 11, 2025, 03:54 PM Dec 11

How a simple slipknot can help surgeons tie the perfect suture

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-12-simple-slipknot-surgeons-suture.html
by Paul Arnold, Medical Xpress


Schematic of mechanical information transmission in a string by slipknots. Credit: Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09673-w


In surgical procedures, the last knot of a suture is crucial because it must hold the wound firmly in place to allow proper healing. But many surgeons struggle to apply the perfect tension. Tie it too tightly, and it can cut off the blood supply to the tissue, causing damage. However, if it is not tight enough, the wound might leak, or the repair could fail. Robotic surgeons also face difficulties because their electronic sensors lack the necessary tactile feedback or are too large for delicate procedures.

But this may not be a problem for much longer, as a surgeon and mechanical engineer have joined forces to create a mechanical transmission mechanism based on the slipknot that can help surgeons pull the final knot to the right tension every time.

Introducing Sliputure

Unlike many other knots that are permanent and hold tension rigidly, a slipknot is designed to slide and adjust under force. Building on this principle, surgery professor Cai Xiujun and aerospace engineering professor Li Tiefeng at Zhejiang University School of Medicine created a smart suture system called Sliputure in which the knot is engineered to open at a specific, preset force.

Sliputure is a special kind of suture made from standard surgical thread, which is used for the main suture. It features a tiny, pre-tied slipknot elsewhere along the thread that acts like a mechanical tripwire or tension fuse. When a surgeon or robot pulls the main suture to tighten the final knot, tension builds, and when a preset optimal tension is reached, the tiny slipknot releases.

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How a simple slipknot can help surgeons tie the perfect suture (Original Post) erronis Dec 11 OP
Not so easy with nylon suture... Interesting. hlthe2b Dec 11 #1
Good news! Hope this new suture works well. ...n/t CaliforniaPeggy Dec 11 #2
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