What’s with the oozing from the chin stitches?

The ooze from chin suture is usually normal tissue exudate or inflammatory secretion from the wound. 1. Tissue exudate: Usually, after suture surgery, the part of the wound that has not healed will exude tissue fluid; it is a yellowish cool liquid without odor, which has the function of protecting the wound; generally, there is no need for special treatment, and regular medication changes can keep the wound clean and dry. 2. Inflammatory secretion: If the wound appears to be infected and inflamed, it will lead to pus, and then ooze out a thick and smelly white or yellow liquid; it is necessary to carry out the rinsing of the wound and change the medicine, and must follow the doctor’s instructions to take or inject anti-inflammatory drugs intravenously (e.g., amoxicillin, cefuroxime, levofloxacin, etc.) in order to control the inflammation. Chin stitches have oozing recommend timely medical diagnosis and symptomatic treatment, to avoid delaying the condition.