Lifting Efficiency of Barbed Sutures for Potential Face Lifting Application: A Parametric Analysis
Chen‐Ying Su, Mayur Jiyalal Prajapati, Jia‐Rou Lin, Cho‐Pei Jiang, Hsu‐Wei Fang

TL;DR
This study finds that the geometry of barbed sutures affects their lifting efficiency for facial rejuvenation, with a specific design offering the best performance.
Contribution
The study introduces a parametric analysis of barbed suture geometry to optimize lifting efficiency and stability for facial lifting applications.
Findings
Higher pulling speed increases maximum lift but reduces efficiency due to slippage.
The Forward-Reverse 90° barb configuration offers the highest lifting efficiency and stability.
Optimized suture design improves holding capacity and reduces slippage compared to commercial sutures.
Abstract
Absorbable barbed sutures have been widely used for minimally invasive facial rejuvenation. However, clinical lifting performance varies due to differences in suture geometry, which remain insufficiently quantified. The study aims to evaluate the effects of barb rotation angle, barb orientation, and pulling speed on the lifting performance and efficiency of the barbed sutures. The goal is to identify the optimized geometric design for facial lifting applications. The barbs were fabricated with four rotation angles (30°, 45°, 90°, and 180°) and four orientations (Forward, Reverse, Forward‐Reverse, and Reverse‐Forward). The fabricated sutures were tested at 10, 50, and 100 mm/min. Maximum lifting and holding displacements and lifting efficiency were quantified. Statistical analysis was conducted using one‐way ANOVA with Tukey's post hoc test (p < 0.05). Higher pulling speed increased…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFacial Rejuvenation and Surgery Techniques · Surgical Sutures and Adhesives · Nasal Surgery and Airway Studies
