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interventionell

Interventionell is a medical term used primarily in German-speaking contexts to describe procedures that actively treat a condition through an intervention, often employing minimally invasive techniques. In English, the corresponding adjective is interventional, and the related field is interventional radiology, which uses imaging guidance to perform catheter- or needle-based treatments.

Scope and examples: Interventional procedures include catheter-based therapies such as percutaneous transluminal angioplasty with or without

Imaging guidance and practice: Most interventionell procedures rely on real-time or near real-time imaging to guide

History and development: The field grew from diagnostic angiography and catheterization in the mid-20th century and

Clinical considerations: Interventionell techniques typically offer shorter hospital stays, quicker recovery, and lower morbidity compared with

stent
placement
to
reopen
narrowed
vessels;
embolization
to
control
bleeding
or
treat
tumors;
ablation
therapies
(radiofrequency,
microwave)
to
destroy
tissue;
image-guided
biopsies,
drainage,
or
the
placement
of
implants
such
as
vascular
access
devices
or
heart
valves.
Many
of
these
procedures
are
performed
with
guidance
from
fluoroscopy,
ultrasound,
CT,
or
MRI.
instruments
from
the
skin
to
the
target
area,
allowing
targeted
treatment
with
minimal
invasiveness.
Teams
often
include
interventional
radiologists,
interventional
cardiologists,
vascular
surgeons,
and
other
specialists.
expanded
rapidly
from
the
1970s
onward,
driven
by
advances
in
imaging,
catheter
technology,
and
biomaterials.
This
evolution
led
to
a
broad
range
of
minimally
invasive
therapeutic
options
across
vascular,
oncologic,
and
other
specialties.
open
surgery,
but
they
carry
procedure-specific
risks
such
as
bleeding,
infection,
contrast
reactions,
and
device-
or
catheter-related
complications.
Appropriate
patient
selection
and
multidisciplinary
planning
are
essential.