Vascular Injury

Vessels at risk

 

Extra-pelvic blood vessels Intrapelvic vessels

Femoral Artery

MCFA

LCFA

Profunda Femoris

Obturator artery

External iliac artery and vein

Obturator artery

Superior and inferior gluteal

 

External Iliac Vessels

 

Anatomy

 

Anterior division of common iliacs / L5-S1

- runs down medial border of psoas

- psoas separates external iliacs & intrapelvic surface of anterior column

 

Injury

 

Anterosuperior screws

- significant intrapelvic bleeding may occur before diagnosis

- vein more at risk than artery

 

Intra-pelvic cement / components

- danger with removal / revision

- CT angiogram pre-operatively

- may require separate intrapelvic exposure

- alert general surgeons / vascular surgeons

 

Intra-pelvic cement

 

Intrapelvic acetabIntra-pelvic revision

 

Femoral blood vessels

 

Most commonly injured

 

Anatomy

 

Common femoral artery

- continuation of EIA as passes under inguinal ligament

- passes anterior to hip capsule

- separated from it by psoas

 

Injury

 

Anterior retractors / dissection

Anterior quadrant screws and drills

 

Obturator blood vessels

 

Anatomy

 

Traverse lateral wall

- separated from quadrilateral plate by obturator internus

- lie at superolater aspect of obturator foramen

- exit pelvis via obturator canal

 

Injury

 

Screws in AI quadrant

Retractor under transverse acetabular ligament

 

Management

 

Bleeding at inferior transverse ligament

- can be very difficult to ligate

- pack with swab

- hold swab with inferior retractor

- finish acetabulum

- will usually be controlled

 

+/- embolization

 

Superor gluteal blood vessels

 

Anatomy

 

Branch posterior division internal iliac artery

- close to posterior column

- exits greater sciatic notch above piriformis

 

Injury

 

Screw near sciatic notch

 

Inferior Gluteal & Internal Pudendal vessels

 

Anatomy

 

Branch anterior division internal iliac

- exit pelvis between piriformis & coccygeus

- close to posterior column near ischial spine

- internal pudendal artery re-enters pelvis through lesser notch

- inferior gluteal artery passes under piriformis

 

Injury

 

Very long screws through posterior column

 

Management on table severe bleeding

 

Anaethetist

- IV fluids

- Bloods - coags, CBC, platelets, cross match

- transfuse blood +/- platelets

- organise cell saver

 

Control bleeding

- call vascular surgeon

- pack & wait

 

Vascular surgeon

- Ilioinguinal approach - clamp IIA, vessiloop IIV

- Retro-peritoneal approach / Rutherford-Morrison incision

 

Post-operatively

- angiography

- transcatheter embolisation