yes
Yes they can, but the catch is they have to be trained in doing it first. these days there are a few organizations who train nurses to put sutures in and take them out.
The Sphenoid (Sphenoidal Bone) this is why it is know as the keystone of the cranial floor *The sphenoid is not a facial bone, it is a cranial bone. There is no facial bone which 'articulates' with 'every other facial bone'. Articulation suggests jointed so sutures would make more sense & these sutures would be on all facial bones edges which knit them together
The malformations caused by premature closure of the cranial sutures are, collectively, called craniostenosis. These take several different forms, depending on which suture closes prematurely.
continuous interrupted sutures
The person is from ages 32-50 when the lambdoidal and sagittal sutures are fused but the coronal sutures are not fused.
msds sheet for sutures
Sutures are immovable, wavy joints between the bones of skull.
NO, sutures are wavy, immovable joint found in skull.
Absorbable Sutures Polyglycolic Acid SuturesPolyglactin 910 SuturesCatgut SuturesPoliglecaprone SuturesPolydioxanone SuturesNon-absorbable Sutures Polypropylene SuturesPolyamide / Nylon SuturesPolyester SuturesSilk SuturesPolyvinylidene fluoride / PVDF SuturesStainless Steel Sutures
Sutures
Sutures are only found in the skull. Sutures are classified as a Fibrous joint - and permit no movement. Sutures are connected by fibro cartilage. Fibrous cartilage is made up of dense irregular connective tissue.