Interventional Radiology
Interventional Radiology (IR) is a radiology specialty in which a radiologist uses diagnostic imaging such as x-rays and ultrasound to guide small tubes through vessels or the liver to treat disease that would otherwise require surgery. The term interventional means to intervene in an ongoing disease process. The Interventional Department is made up of an Interventional Radiologist, Interventional Technologist, and staff nurses.
Over recent years, procedural advancements have been made in Interventional Radiology. We now have the capability of doing procedures that would otherwise require a surgical procedure with a longer hospital admission and recovery
Procedures
- Angiography: An exam of the arteries and veins to aid in diagnosing blockages and other blood vessel abnormalities.
- Balloon Angioplasty: An exam that opens blocked or narrowed blood vessels by inserting a very small balloon into the vessel and inflating it. Used to unblock clogged arteries in the legs or arms (called peripheral arterial disease or PAD), kidneys, brain or elsewhere in the body.
- Biliary Drainage and Stenting: Uses a stent (small mesh tube) to open up blocked ducts and allow bile to drain from the liver.
- Bleeding Internally: Interventional radiologists can pinpoint the area of internal bleeding with angiography and inject a clotting substance, such as a gel, foam or tiny coils, through a thin catheter to stop the bleeding.
- Central Venous Access: Insertion of a tube beneath the skin and into the blood vessels so that patients can receive medication or nutrients directly into the blood stream or so blood can be drawn.
- Embolization: Delivery of clotting agents (coils, plastic particles, gel, foam, etc.) directly to an area that is bleeding or to block blood flow to a problem area, such as an aneurysm or a fibroid tumor in the uterus.
- ESI Injections: A common treatment option for many forms of back pain and leg pain. The effects tend to be temporary in providing relief, from one week to a year, thus allowing the patient to progress in their rehabilitation program.
- Gastrostomy Tube: Feeding tube inserted into the stomach for patients who are unable to take sufficient food by mouth.
- Hemodialysis Access Maintenance: Use of angioplasty or thrombolysis to open blocked grafts for hemodialysis, which treats kidney failure.
- Infection and Abscess Drainage: Patients with a variety of illnesses may develop an area of persistent infection (abscess) in the body. The infection can be drained by inserting a catheter through a small nick in the skin and to the site of the infection. Also used to treat complications of open surgery.
- Needle Biopsy: Used to provide a specimen for the pathologist (specialists that reviews tissues) to test for various abnormal cells like cancer. Needle biopsies can be done in CT and U/S. The most common are breast, liver, and lung.
- Radiofrequency Ablation: Use of radiofrequency (RF) energy to "cook" and kill cancerous tumors.
- Stent: A small flexible tube made of plastic or wire mesh, used to treat a variety of medical conditions (e.g., to hold open clogged blood vessels or other pathways that have been narrowed or blocked by tumors or obstructions).
- Stent Graft: Reinforces a ruptured or ballooning section of an artery (an aneurysm) with a fabric-wrapped stent a small, flexible mesh tube used to "patch" the blood vessel. Also known as an endograph.
- Thrombolysis: Dissolves blood clots by injecting clot-busting drugs at the site of the clot. Treats blood clots in the brain to reverse the effects of stroke; treats deep vein thrombosis in the leg to prevent permanent disability.
- TIPS (Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt): A life-saving procedure to improve blood flow and prevent hemorrhage in patients with severe liver dysfunction.
- Urinary Tract Obstruction: The ureter carries urine from the kidneys to the bladder and sometimes becomes blocked by kidney stones or other obstructions. The interventional radiologist inserts a catheter through a small nick in the skin and into the blocked kidney to drain the urine.
- Uterine Artery Embolization: An embolization procedure of uterine arteries to stop life-threatening postpartum bleeding, potentially preventing hysterectomy. The same procedure is used to treat fibroid tumors and is then called UFE (Uterine Fibroid Embolization).
- Uterine Fibroid Embolization: Cuts off the blood supply to the fibroid, causing them to shrink and die, and symptoms to subside (also known as uterine artery embolization).
- Varicocele Embolization: A treatment for "varicose veins" in the scrotum, which can cause male infertility and pain.
- Varicose Vein Treatment: The saphenous vein is sealed shut through the use of a laser or radio frequency non-surgically.
- Vena Cava Filter: A tiny cage-like device that is inserted in a blood vessel to break up clots and prevent them from reaching the heart or lungs. Prevents pulmonary embolism.
- Vertebroplasty: A pain treatment for fractured vertebra in which medical-grade bone cement is injected into the vertebra.