Overview
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Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi’s Imaging Institute offers a comprehensive range of interventional radiology services as part of the Diagnostic & Therapeutic Interventional Radiology Program. Interventional radiology uses imaging technologies to perform and support minimally invasive surgeries. Advanced imaging enables surgeons to manipulate surgical tools and navigate around the body with a great amount of accuracy without resorting to open surgery. This means that patients can leave the hospital sooner and recover faster.
What We Treat
The Diagnostic & Therapeutic Interventional Radiology Program team uses interventional radiology to treat patients suffering from a variety of health issues, including:
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Vascular conditions (like narrowing of the arteries, varicose veins, or blocked veins)
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Cancer (treatment for tumors and their effects on the body’s organs)
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Kidney stones
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Bladder stones.
Vascular conditions constitute the primary application of interventional radiology, followed by cancer. By collaborating with oncologists as well as physicians in Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi’s Heart & Vascular Institute, program caregivers are able to provide the very best, Patients First care.
Diagnosis & Treatment
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The Diagnostic & Therapeutic Interventional Radiology Program at the Imaging Institute allows physicians to use cutting-edge imaging techniques to make diagnoses as well as guide minimally invasive surgeries with a great deal of accuracy. The scope of diagnostic and treatment procedures performed by the highly trained program team includes:
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Stent or balloon placement: This technique may be used to unblock an artery or vein or widen a vessel in the case of vascular disease. The stent or balloon is guided into the vessel using ultrasound or other imaging technologies.
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Tumor ablation: In this procedure, the physician inserts a thin, needle-like probe into the tumor. The probe is then heated with a high-frequency current that destroys the tumor and cancer cells.
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Angiography: In this procedure, a catheter is inserted into the artery, and a dye is injected. Using imaging, the physician can view the dye’s movement and identify any blockages or narrowing of the arteries.
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Balloon angioplasty: Also known as a coronary angioplasty, this procedure uses a catheter with a balloon on the tip, inserted into the artery. The balloon is then inflated to help open a narrowed artery.
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Biliary drainage and stenting: Biliary drainage is the process in which a blocked bile duct is drained using small plastic tubes. Metal or plastic stents can then be put in place to keep the duct open.
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Central venous access: This technique allows medication or fluid to be administered directly into the venous system using a catheter that is inserted into a large vein.
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Chemoembolization: This treatment is used to supply chemotherapy, or anticancer drugs, as well as blood-blocking agents directly to the blood vessels surrounding a tumor to kill the cancer cells.
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Embolization: A catheter is used to inject small beads, which serve as blood blocking agents, into blood vessels, limiting the blood flow to a certain area of the body.
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Gastrostomy tube: This device, also known as a feeding tube or a G-tube, is inserted into the abdomen and used to provide nutrition directly to the stomach.
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Hemodialysis access maintenance: A hemodialysis access is the point at which the hemodialysis treatment – which cleans the kidneys – is connected to the vascular system. Hemodialysis access maintenance may involve the placement of stents to open up a narrowed access.
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Infection and abscess drainage: If an infection is retaining fluid or has formed an abscess – a painful mass filled with fluid – the fluid may need to be drained by placing a needle or catheter in the infected area.
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Radiofrequency ablation: Using x-ray guidance, a radiofrequency needle is directed along a nerve; the needle is heated with radiofrequency to create a lesion on the nerve, and disrupt its activity.
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Uterine fibroid embolization: X-ray guidance is used to deliver blood-blocking agents directly to the uterine artery in order to reduce the blood flow to the uterine fibroids (non-cancerous masses in the uterus).
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Varicocele embolization: In this procedure, imaging is used to guide catheter placement in a varicocele, an enlarged vein in the scrotum. The catheter is used to place a coil that diverts or blocks blood from going to the enlarged vein.
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Prostatic artery embolization for enlarged prostates: A catheter is directed into the large veins leading to the prostate and blood-blocking agents are placed in the blood vessel in order to block blood flow and reduce swelling.
Meet Our Team
The Imaging Institute’s Diagnostic & Therapeutic Interventional Radiology Program is a multidisciplinary collaboration of specialized, highly knowledgeable physicians and other team members. Caregivers involved in patient care for this program are:
- Interventional radiologists
- Interventional radiology technologists
- Nurses trained to work with patients undergoing interventional radiology procedures