Interventional radiology requires the introduction of a catheter – a long, thin, flexible tube – into the body, typically into an artery. The catheter combines the use of medical imaging with diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. These procedures are primarily used to unblock blood vessels – either coronary arteries to prevent heart attacks; carotid arteries to prevent cerebrovascular accidents; or renal arteries to cure secondary hypertension.
Other applications are:
- image-guided biopsy, which allows for the collection of solid mass samples without the need of more demanding surgical procedures;
- embolization of cerebral aneurysms to prevent potentially catastrophic intra-cerebral bleedings; and
- drainage of purulent abscesses that may result from surgical interventions.
Interventional radiology is necessarily performed in conjunction with imaging procedures, typically:
- fluoroscopy, which uses differential X-rays absorption from different tissues to produce cine-like images;
- digital subtraction angiography, which uses computer subtraction of background images to enhance arterial blood-flow;
- ultrasound, based on the same principle as fluoroscopy but taking advanced of using differential reflection of sound waves inside the body instead of X-rays;
- computed tomography , which uses X-rays to create cross-sectional images of the body; and
- magnetic resonance imaging , which provides the same results using magnetic fields instead of radiation.