Key Principles
- Leave sheath in place during:
- Ongoing resuscitation
- Concern for re-bleeding
- Prior to transport
- Premature removal risks:
- Loss of access
- Hemorrhage
- Inability to re-establish aortic occlusion
Patency Maintenance
- Continuous flow is mandatory
- Preferred: Pressure bag + arterial line transduction
- Alternative: Continuous or intermittent (via manual flush) saline or heparinized saline infusion
- Suggested heparinized infusion:
- ~500 units/hour (if not contraindicated)
- If not transduced:
- No-flow and stagnant blood in sheath = rapid thrombosis
Monitoring
- Continuous arterial waveform monitoring (if transduced)
- Watch for dampening or loss of waveform
- Neurovascular checks minimum: hourly
- Assess:
- Pulses / Doppler signals
- Skin color and temperature
- Motor and sensory function
Positioning & Transport
- Keep patient:
- Supine or reverse Trendelenburg
- If movement required:
- Avoid hip flexion
- Secure sheath prior to transport (suturing in place ideal)
- Maintain continuous pressure or low rate infusion during transport
Pre-Removal Evaluation
- Confirm access site and sheath position:
- Physical exam (inguinal ligament landmarks)
- X-ray (relative to femoral head to hold pressure over bony landmark)
- CT (± contrast) if available or already obtained
- Angiography (if available)
Sheath Removal
- Only after:
- Definitive hemorrhage control
- In appropriate setting (Role 3/4 capable of vascular management)
- Do NOT remove immediately prior to transport
- Removal considerations:
- Manual pressure ≥30 minutes
- Large sheath / coagulopathy / difficulty → consider surgical cutdown
- If operative repair is anticipated:
- Leave sheath in place until controlled exposure achieved