Pare suture


Pa·ré su·ture

(pah-rē'), the approximation of the edges of a wound by pasting strips of cloth to the surface and stitching them instead of the skin.

Paré suture

An obsolete form of open-wound approximation in which a plaster cloth was attached to both sides and the cloth, rather than the skin, was sewed together. Devised by French surgeon Ambroise Paré (1510–1590).

Pa·ré su·ture

(pah-rā' sū'chŭr) The approximation of the edges of a wound by pasting strips of cloth to the surface and stitching them instead of the skin.

Paré,

Ambroise, French surgeon, 1510-1590. Paré suture - the approximation of the edges of a wound by pasting strips of cloth to the surface and stitching them instead of the skin.