Radiology Solutions for Better Care
When it comes to feeling your best, you deserve options and opportunities that allow you to get back to all the people and activities you love most. AdventHealth Wesley Chapel is here to help you feel your best with vascular interventional radiology.
This branch of imaging offers minimally invasive solutions to treat certain health conditions. During your procedure, your radiologist will use X-ray and other imaging technologies, including MRI, CT scans and ultrasounds, to guide small wires or catheters to treat affected areas of the body. These procedures only require a tiny incision where the catheter is inserted into an artery, so it results in less blood loss, less pain and quicker recovery patients.
Treating Your Body, Mind and Spirit
AdventHealth Wesley Chapel offers a range of minimally invasive interventional radiology techniques to offer safe and effective options to treat a variety of conditions. Discover the diagnostic and treatment imaging services that are right for you.
- Angiography and Angioplasty
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A diagnostic angiogram is used to examine the inside of arteries and veins to detect blockages or narrowing of the vessels.
In angioplasty, a catheter fitted with a balloon device is guided to the affected area to expand the walls and restore blood flow, or a laser can be used to break up the blockage. In some cases, a stent (mesh tube) is placed in the artery to hold it open.
Angioplasty can be used to treat everything from heart disease and circulatory problems to ischemic stroke.
- Embolization
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Embolization is an interventional radiology technique used to stop abnormal bleeding or to cut off blood supply to a particular area, such as a tumor.
Catheters are used to deliver blood-clotting medication, or to place particles or coils in the vessels to stop blood flow.
Embolization can provide a life-saving treatment for hemorrhagic stroke and trauma patients and can serve as an effective treatment for fibroids.
- Vertebroplasty
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Vertebroplasty is used to treat back pain and compression fractures of the spine. Doctors insert a needle into the affected vertebrae and inject bone cement to stabilize the vertebrae and prevent further damage.