Latest Updates
-
Baisakhi 2026: Date, History, Rituals and Cultural Significance Explained -
At 83, Amitabh Bachchan Finds Not Working Each Day Disturbing: Why Breaking Routine Triggers Anxiety -
Alia Bhatt Serves Sharp, Subtle Drama in Gaurav Gupta’s Black Three-Piece Tuxedo -
Boss Lady By Zlaata: Workwear That Made Confidence Visible -
These 6 Seemingly Harmless Lifestyle Habits May Be Increasing Your Colorectal Cancer Risk -
World Health Day 2026: Grand Master Akshar Explains How Yoga Can Help Manage Diabetes and Hypertension -
Dal Khichdi Recipe: A Light Comfort Meal Everyone Loves -
From Hashtags to Merch Drops: How Fandom Fashion Became Part of the Story -
₹1000 Crore and Counting: ‘Dhurandhar 2’ Isn’t Just a Hit, It’s a Box Office Phenomenon -
Akshaya Tritiya 2026 Date: April 19 or 20? Know The Right Day To Buy Gold This Year
Synthetic Sutures Proven Best Post Delivery

A group of researchers, led by Christine Kettle, Ph.D., of the University Hospital of North Staffordshire, in England, found that women who are stitched with synthetic sutures had less pain in three days after delivery, and had taken few painkillers over the coming 10 days.
Scientists also admitted that the expertise of the person doing the stitch may also be an important aspect. And 70 percent of women who have normal delivery (vaginal birth) need stitches if their perineum (the muscles and skin between the vagina and the anus) is damaged.
Pain at the sutured tear or cut “can be distressing for the new mother when she is trying to cope with hormonal changes in her and the demands of her baby, and it can have a long-term effect on her sexual relationship," Kettle said.
When Kettle and her colleagues compared the standard synthetic sutures to synthetic stitch, the necessity of a physician or a mid-wife to remove standard stitches.
“This is an important finding," she said, “as women report that having perineal sutures removed is an extremely unpleasant procedure."
Reviewers noted that synthetic sutures were opted by women in developed countries than Catgut sutures.
This review appears in the current issue of 'The Cochrane Library'.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications











