Spirit Flesh and Suture Removal: Difference between pages

From BME Encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Page conversion via llm-mediawiki-rev -jwm)
 
(Page conversion via llm-mediawiki-rev -jwm)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; width:200px; margin:10px;"
''Non-absorbable sutures must eventually be removed''
! colspan="2" | ''Spirit + Flesh''
|-
! colspan="2" | [[File:Spiritandflesh.jpg|100px|Spiritandflesh.jpg]]
|-
! Author
| [[Fakir Musafar]]
|-
! Illustrator
|
|-
! Genre
| Biography
|-
! Country
| United States
|-
! Publisher
| Arena Editions
|-
! Published
| April 2002
|-
! Language
| English
|-
! Pages
| 184
|-
! ISBN
| 189204157X
|}


'''Spirit + Flesh''' is a hardcover book documenting fifty years of body play by [[Fakir Musafar]] and others. Following the introduction, the 196 page book is entirely photographs, without caption or comment. Many, if not most, of the photographs were featured in [[Body Play Magazine]].
[[Sutures|Skin sutures]] generally are removed from five to eight days after application, with sutures on the neck or face generally being removed slightly sooner. Absorbable sutures lose enough strength in that period that they can often be removed without cutting, but non-absorbables will need to be cut out:


== External links ==
1. Clean the area with an [[Antiseptic|antiseptic]], and, if required, use [[Hydrogen peroxide (page does not exist)|hydrogen peroxide]] to remove any [[Crusties|crusties]].
* [http://www.fakir.org/store/index.html# Buy the book directly from Fakir Musafar]


== See also ==
2. Pick up one end of the suture, and make the cut as close to where the suture goes in the [[Skin|skin]] as possible.
* [[Fakir Musafar]]
 
* [[Body Play Magazine]]
3. Gently pull the suture out.
 
To reduce the risk of infection, make sure the cut is made where the suture goes in the skin (rather than just anywhere in the exposed area). If you draw a suture that's been in contact with the outside world, you risk drawing contamination into the [[Wound|wound]] and getting an [[Infection|infection]].
 
[[Doctor|Doctors]] use specialized [[Tools|tools]] for suture removal, but if you find yourself in a bind, [[Tweezers (page does not exist)|tweezers]] and [[Nail clippers (page does not exist)|nail clippers]] do the job just fine.

Latest revision as of 18:27, 25 September 2023

Non-absorbable sutures must eventually be removed

Skin sutures generally are removed from five to eight days after application, with sutures on the neck or face generally being removed slightly sooner. Absorbable sutures lose enough strength in that period that they can often be removed without cutting, but non-absorbables will need to be cut out:

1. Clean the area with an antiseptic, and, if required, use hydrogen peroxide to remove any crusties.

2. Pick up one end of the suture, and make the cut as close to where the suture goes in the skin as possible.

3. Gently pull the suture out.

To reduce the risk of infection, make sure the cut is made where the suture goes in the skin (rather than just anywhere in the exposed area). If you draw a suture that's been in contact with the outside world, you risk drawing contamination into the wound and getting an infection.

Doctors use specialized tools for suture removal, but if you find yourself in a bind, tweezers and nail clippers do the job just fine.