Indications

  • Difficulty with sheath removal
  • Large-bore sheath
  • Suspected arterial injury (dissection, thrombosis, perforation)
  • Expanding or large hematoma (strongly consider retroperitoneal iliac artery control)
  • Uncontrolled bleeding
  • Coagulopathy
  • Prolonged dwell time
  • Failed percutaneous removal or inability to achieve hemostasis

Key Principles

  • Do NOT remove the sheath blindly if complication is suspected
  • Leave the sheath in place to:
    • Maintain access
    • Provide tamponade
    • Guide surgical exposure
  • Perform cutdown directly over the sheath for controlled removal and to limit hematoma expansion
  • Bleeding should be expected as dissection approaches the artery
  • A vascular closure device may be used in select cases, but is not commonly available in deployed environments

Proximal Control (Critical Step)

  • Options include:
    • Retroperitoneal control of the iliac artery
    • REBOA in Zone 3
    • Percutaneous proximal endovascular balloon occlusion of iliac artery (advanced technique)
    • Up-and-over balloon from contralateral side over the point of access (advanced technique)
  • ⚠️Best option in high-risk scenarios:
    • Retroperitoneal exposure of the external iliac artery
  • Strongly consider retroperitoneal exposure when:
    • Large or expanding hematoma
    • Sheath has already been removed and landmarks obscured by hematoma
    • Inadequate control from groin exposure

Surgical Approach (Cutdown Over Sheath)

  • Longitudinal incision over access site
  • Dissect to expose:
    • Common femoral artery (CFA)
    • Bifurcation (SFA and profunda)
  • Carefully expose vessel:
    • Do not dislodge sheath prematurely
    • Control soft tissue bleeding

Obtain Control

  • Proximal: CFA ± external iliac
  • Distal: SFA and profunda
  • Use:
    • Vessel loops (preferred)
    • Clamps if needed

Sheath Removal

  • Remove under direct vision after control obtained
  • Anticipate:
    • Bleeding as dissection nears point of arteriotomy (arterial entry point)
    • Enlarging arteriotomy to visualize all layers and ensure no dissection or thrombus
    • Thrombus/dissected artery
    • Flushing the arteries and ensuring backbleeding

Assess the Artery

  • Evaluate for:
    • Dissection
    • Thrombosis
    • Perforation
  • Intraoperative ultrasound (strongly recommended)
    • Confirms patency
    • Identifies thrombus/dissection
    • Assesses distal flow
    • May avoid unnecessary arteriotomy extension

Repair Options

  • Primary repair → small defect
  • Patch angioplasty (nearby vein best) → larger defect / prevent stenosis
  • Interposition graft → segmental injury
  • Thrombectomy → if thrombus present (may be required in addition to repair technique above)

Adjuncts

  • Heparin (if appropriate)
  • Back-bleeding and forward-bleeding prior to closure (flushing the arteries)
  • Confirm flow:
    • Palpable pulses
    • Doppler signals
    • Ultrasound
  • Closure
  • Ensure hemostasis
  • Layered closure
  • Consider drain if significant bleeding risk

 

Surgical Management of Femoral Arterial Sheaths Algorithm