🩹 Heal Smart, Heal Fast!
The (3 CT) 1 X 3.7” Wound Closure Strips are a revolutionary solution for wound care, designed to provide effective, stitch-free closures that promote scar-free healing. This kit includes three adhesive strips and three PU dressings, ensuring you are prepared for any minor injury. With effortless application and hypoallergenic materials, these strips are safe for all skin types, making them an essential addition to any first aid kit.
C**O
Very helpful!
These are very great and easy to use. They really helped with a large cut. They helped it close up and heal quickly!
A**R
the great thongs you hope you never need
if you do any outside activeity that may lead to a cut injury these are a must for yer kit
J**D
Simplicity In An Emergency
The idea of being able to close a wound without assistance was what drew us to these closures. We had the occasion to use them shortly after they arrived (not what we'd planned), and realized they performed exactly as promised. They wound closed quickly and healed considerably faster than expected. Less scarring after the fact, too. All good outcomes.
C**N
The New Stitch
I haven’t had to use them yet, but I’m sure they will work great.
A**A
Good stick, works great!!
Good at sticking to skin just shave any hair cause it will NOT stick (saw questions asking if you have to shave). Used em for my pup after she got spayed, she accidentally popped a stitch (of course it was Sat 2am and Vet isn't open on weekends) luckily there was Prime, next morning shipping.. also, it's good to wrap it after placing "stitch" with some gauze rolled around or an elastic\ace bandage of some sort will work too, I don't recommend leaving it open\exposed. 1st pic is before placing stitch, 2nd pic is 9 days after 1st stitch (it would have been ok at 6\7 days but she wouldn't stop running so I was extra cautious). I'm a nurse so here are some pro tips: If it bleeds or gets wet\soaked, change it ASAP, if not wet\dirty, change every 2-3+ days is fine (when taking a shower wrap in plastic wrap or plastic bag and tape the ends to you). Don't apply it if it's actively bleeding (it won't stick and you'll waste a stitch) apply pressure and raise wound above your heart (if it's on your leg, lay down and prop leg up on something, it may take a few min to stop). Make sure it's clean BEFORE applying stitch, flush it out with bottled water\saline flush\filtered water (tap water is NOT clean it goes thru dirty pipes and can\will give you a wicked infection, sepsis is deadly) after flushing, wipe AROUND the area with alcohol\ alcohol wipes, then use an antiseptic, iodine or povidone-iodine (what they use before they cut you open for surgery) with clean qtips, rub vigorously around and as close to wound as poss) make sure it's dry, do NOT BLOW ON IT!!! Your mouth has nasty germs that can\will cause sepsis (very deadly)!! Oh and WASH YOUR HANDS BEFORE TOUCING ANYTHING!!! Gloves are good too but you still need to wash your hands before doing anything!! Last thing, Neosporin doesn't really help, just keep it clean, covered and the bandage dry\clean and it will heal beautifully!! Make sure to clip off excess pull tabs so they don't get caught on something and rip it off.
C**Y
for emergencies
Got these for emergencies. Did try one on just for practice. Worked fine. Comfortable and stayed on.
T**C
Didn't stick at all
EDIT: They offered a refund, so I gotta give them credit for that. And my guess is these would work OK on people or body parts that aren't as hairy.These ended up being completely useless. I had a cut on my chin -- a straight, vertical cut about 3/4" long about 3/16" deep, high enough on my chin that the bandage could attach flat on the surface. I washed the area with soap and dried it, then tried to attach one of these to close the cut. The first one didn't stick AT ALL; I actually spent about two minutes trying to peel another protective layer off it because I thought I must have missed one, but no, it just didn't adhere to the surface at all.My beard *partially* covered the area where the bandage needed to attach, so I shaved using an electric razor, leaving about a millimeter of stubble, then again washed and dried my face. I attached the bandage and pulled the zip ties to close the wound. The bandage stuck for about 30 seconds before one side became detached and wouldn't reattach.For the last remaining bandage, I shaved completely with a new razor blade. (I normally avoid shaving totally clean because it always causes razor burn or folliculitis. Plus, if these things are supposed to be for emergencies, they should be able to handle a hairy surface; somebody stuck out in nature isn't going to be able to shave.) This time, the bandage stuck for about 90 minutes -- just long enough to allow the wound to START to close, then tear back open after the bandage suddenly failed and detached.
J**A
Amazing
It’s really really amazing
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