This subspecialty of Radiology employs imaging to guide procedures using minimally invasive techniques. Procedures may be performed anywhere in the body by using specially designed catheters (thin plastic tubes) and guidewires that can be passed through blood vessels, ducts or other pathways in the body. In most instances, only a small puncture in the skin is necessary, and there is little if any discomfort during the procedure. Most procedures can be performed with only minimal amounts of sedation and while using local anesthetics. 

A wide variety of problems can be treated using interventional techniques. These include embolization (occlusion) of bleeding arteries, opening arteries that are narrowed or blocked from atherosclerosis, dissolving blood clots, opening blockages in bile ducts or ureters, and treating various tumors by injection of special combinations of chemotherapy and embolization agents. Tumors are also being treated using special needles or focused ultrasound, which kills tumor cells by overheating them-a process known as thermal ablation. Diagnostic studies are also part of interventional radiology. These include angiography, venography and biopsies of mass lesions almost anywhere in the body to obtain tissue for pathologic diagnosis.

Interventional radiologists are fully trained diagnostic radiologists who have undergone an additional one or two years of training in interventional techniques. The American Board of Radiology and the American Board of Medical Specialists officially recognize the field of interventional radiology as a subspecialty of radiology. It has its own subspecialty board examination and certification.

At Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, we routinely perform some of the most advanced interventional radiology procedures available.

Diagnostic Procedures:

  • Angiography/angiogram
  • Imaging-guided breast biopsies
  • Ultrasound or CT-guided biopsies
  • Venography
  • Venous sampling of various endocrine organs

Therapeutic Procedures:

  • Biliary drainage procedures and stents
  • Chemoembolization of liver tumors
  • Embolization procedures (trauma, GI tract)
  • Embolization procedures (vascular malformations)
  • Fibroid clinic
  • IVC filter placement
  • Kidney drainage procedures and stents
  • Percutaneous abscess drainages
  • Regional thrombolysis
  • Tumor ablation: radiofrequency, focused ultrasound or thermal
  • Thrombectomy (including transcatheter thrombectomy)
  • Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (TIPS)
  • Transluminal balloon angioplasty and stenting
  • Uterine artery embolization
  • Vascular foreign body retrievals
  • Venous access procedures