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  • Percutaneous Cholecystostomy

    Percutaneous cholecystostomy (PC) is usually an image-guided procedure that involves placing a drainage catheter directly into the gallbladder. The procedure has an important clinical application in emergency treatment of gallbladder disease. I said it is ''usually'' an image-guided procedure; however, our institution had several patients in need ...
    Posted to Interventional Radiology Then and Now (Weblog) on November 23, 2009
  • Advice for Students

    As a student, if you have a chance to choose a final rotation while in school, go out on a limb and try out an area that you are weak in or know little about. This is what prompted me to choose CT. I only had a quick, six-week rotation through CT, and it was cut short by the end-of-the-year holidays. My didactic training in CT was also ...
  • Excellent Customer Service

    Tampa General Hospital, my home away from home on the weekends, does a great deal to ensure that all employees provide the best customer service to all of our patients and visitors. This week, I attended a four-hour training off site at a beautiful hotel on the water. A delicious dinner was also provided, and we even got paid for our time.The ...
  • Lower Extremity Occlusive Disease

    Now that Halloween has passed, I would like to return to our discussion on peripheral vascular disease. I would like to devote this entry to an exploration of the pathophysiology of lower extremity occlusive disease (LEOD). LEOD is a progressive disease--specifically, chronic ischemia of the lower limbs due to the atherosclerotic process ...
    Posted to Interventional Radiology Then and Now (Weblog) on November 9, 2009
  • Happy Halloween

    Happy Halloween everyone, even though I am not a fan of the celebrations, I hope everyone has a safe and enjoyable time. It is a nice time of the year and I do enjoy fall until it is time to turn the clocks back. Last week I drove to New Hampshire to visit my son for parents' day at his college, and I must say it was a very scenic ride, even ...
    Posted to Interventional Radiology Then and Now (Weblog) on October 31, 2009
  • Time Off

    Not only am I enjoying my new career more and more each week but I am so grateful to have all of the benefits that come with a full time position. My benefits recently kicked in and I am saving a good deal of money each month on prescriptions and doctor's visits.One thing I haven't had since 1997 is paid time off. I took my first weekend off this ...
  • Diagnosis Humor

    Growing up the daughter of a college English professor I quickly learned the power, beauty, and often humor of the written word. A well written poem is as brilliant to me as a famous painting. One task I have at work is to read the nurse's and doctor's notes charted on my patient before performing the ordered exam. The reasons why people come to ...
  • Vascular Anatomy

    Times are changing. That is a fact we all know too well. In a lot of hospitals cardiac catheterization labs and interventional radiology are being joined in one department with the name cardiovascular interventional services. It helps hospitals consolidate services that utilize very expensive equipment. I am not getting into all the politics ...
    Posted to Interventional Radiology Then and Now (Weblog) on October 21, 2009
  • I Feel Like I Belong

    I am finally starting to feel like part of the ''CT family.'' I am growing closer to many of my co-workers. It is a small group of us who work only weekends and it has taken a little while for this to happen. This past weekend culminated in my birthday and one of my favorite colleagues got me a delicious cake and card signed by everyone I ...
  • Interventional Radiology Coding

    This post is in response to a comment on a previous blog. That particular blog was on peripheral angioplasty and stenting. Jo from Gulphport,MS, wrote in concerning the coding for multiple stenting procedures in the superficial femoral artery (SFA). The question was, could there be multiple charges with several stents placed in the SFA. It has ...
    Posted to Interventional Radiology Then and Now (Weblog) on October 12, 2009
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