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A vascular sheath is a short, hollow, flexible tube inserted into an artery or vein to provide secure vascular access during interventional procedures.
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It serves as a conduit for the insertion and exchange of wires, catheters, balloons, and devices, while maintaining hemostasis via an inbuilt valve.
| Component | Function |
|---|---|
| Sheath body | The outer tube placed inside the vessel |
| Dilator | A tapered stiff inner piece that facilitates entry |
| Hemostatic valve | Prevents back-bleeding while allowing wire/catheter manipulation |
| Side port (side arm) | Allows continuous flushing or pressure monitoring |
| Y-connector / Tuohy-Borst adapter | Used in long sheaths for endovascular cases |
| Parameter | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Size (French) | 4 Fr to 24 Fr (1 Fr = 0.33 mm) |
| Length | Short (10 cm) to long (45–90 cm), depending on the target site |
| Use | Typical Size | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Routine arterial/venous access | 4–7 Fr | Terumo Radifocus, Merit Prelude |
| Diagnostic angiography | 4–6 Fr | Brachial or femoral access |
| Use | Typical Size | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Complex interventions | 6–12 Fr | Flexor (Cook), Destination (Terumo) |
| TIPS, iliac, renal stenting | Long (25–55 cm) | Often with steerable tips |