Frankenstein Fruits and Spooky Sutures: MD Students Practice Surgical Skills at Seasonal Clinic

Two people are holding a banana with a rectangular section of its peel removed, revealing the inside. One person is holding scissors near the banana, and the other is supporting it. The setting appears to be indoors with artwork visible on the wall in the background.

The WSU Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine’s General Surgery Interest Group held a Spooky Suture Clinic last month, putting a seasonal twist on their monthly event to teach different suture techniques.

First- and second-year medical students stitched grafts of fruit skin onto other fruits to create “Frankenstein Fruits.” One exercise involved suturing patches of lime peels onto bananas.

“It was a great event with an even better turnout!” said Joseph D. Lee (MS2), who helped organized the clinic.

Vice Chair for Surgery Anjali Kumar, MD, MPH, FACS, FASCRS, a practicing colorectal cancer surgeon, also joined the event to share her expertise on suture types and their relevance to surgery.