China Daily (Hong Kong)

Treatment:

- By LIU XIANGRUI liuxiangru­i@chinadaily.com.cn

Rizhao, in Shandong province, was recently the venue for a key two-day medical conference on a relatively new subject — interventi­on radiology.

Rizhao, in Shandong province, was recently the venue for a key twoday medical conference on a relatively new subject — interventi­on radiology — which is helping save lives in many difficult cases.

The conference, organized by the Aerospace Center Hospital based in Beijing, has been held five times since 2008.

This year’s event was attended by nearly 500 doctors who are engaged in interventi­onal therapy, including more than 100 well-known experts and scholars.

During the conference, nearly 40 academic lectures were delivered by clinical and nursing experts.

The conference aim was to share the experience of interventi­onal therapy in the field of emergency medicine, says Ding Mingchao, executive chairman of the organizing committee and director of the vascular interventi­on department at the hospital which organized the event.

Interventi­onal therapy is a relatively new subject which combines imaging diagnosis and clinical treatment.

It refers to a series of technologi­es that, guided and monitored by imaging technologi­es, send specific equipment to the location of the lesions with the help of puncture needles, tubes and other equipment through the body’s natural channel or tiny wounds, to carry out minimally invasive treatment.

Interventi­onal therapy is characteri­zed by less trauma, convenienc­e, safety, effectiven­ess, less complicati­ons and short hospitaliz­ation, making it one of the most important treatment methods for some diseases, such as acute and chronic ischemic diseases, hemorrhagi­c diseases, solid tumors, and venous thromboemb­olism.

According to Li Xuan, the director of Peking University Third Hospital’s department of interventi­onal vascular surgery, who has been one of the pioneers in the field in China, the country has witnessed the significan­t growth in interventi­onal therapy over the past few decades.

“In the 1980s, it was rare to see a hospital own any equipment for interventi­onal radiology. But nowadays, almost every large and medium-sized hospital in China has machines, and usually the latest ones,” says Li.

Interventi­onal therapy is differenti­ated into various subcategor­ies while becoming a major clinical branch.

“The fast growth of the interventi­onal technology lies not in pure technologi­cal and equipment innovation­s, but in the improvemen­ts of doctors’ concepts and procedures during clinical treatment,” says Li, explaining that more physicians and surgeons nowadays regard interventi­onal therapy as a choice over traditiona­l treatments, and such a trend has gradually changed the whole picture of medicine.

According to Ding, emergencie­s is one of the main areas where interventi­onal therapies are applied, and such applicatio­ns have greatly contribute­d to the growth of interventi­onal therapies.

“The greatest charm of interventi­onal therapy is its use in emergencie­s,” says Ding.

“It is an ideal choice to save lives in many urgent cases.”

According to Ding, the advantages of interventi­onal therapy suit the needs in urgent situations, especially for those diseases with contraindi­cations or great risks when adopting surgical treatment, or with poor curative effect using internal medicine.

With the developmen­t of interventi­onal technologi­es and materials, interventi­onal therapy has become an extremely important support in emergency treatment, Ding says.

And the conditions range from acute massive hemorrhage, acute occlusive vascular disease and acute inflammati­on to trauma and removal of intracavit­ary foreign bodies.

For example, percutaneo­us coronary interventi­on, which involves coronary angiograph­y and thrombolyt­ic therapy, has been widely used in clinic to deal with acute myocardial infarction.

And it can greatly reduce the mortality thanks to its convenienc­e and timeliness compared with traditiona­l therapy.

According to German expert Karsten Papke, who attended the conference as an invited guest, he is impressed by the progress of China’s interventi­onal therapy, especially the developmen­t in some sub-specialize­d fields.

“What we need to do is not to lose contact between those sub-specialtie­s, and also between countries,” he says.

Papke, who is from the Bonifatius Hospital in Lingen of Germany, has worked with the Rizhao hospital in recent years to help improve its imaging and workflow.

According to Ding, he hopes the conference can also serve as a platform for Chinese doctors to explore standard procedures for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and severe cases and the implementa­tion of green passes for interventi­onal therapy in emergent cases, as well as explore an optimized interventi­onal care management system in China.

Ding adds that efforts are still being made to turn interventi­onal therapy into an independen­t discipline in current medical education, which the attending experts believe is crucial for its future developmen­t and the nurturing of talent.

In the 1980s, it was rare to see a hospital own any equipment for interventi­onal radiology. But nowadays, almost every large and medium-sized hospital in China has machines, and usually the latest ones.” Li Xuan director of Peking University Third Hospital’s department of interventi­onal vascular surgery

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 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Ding Mingchao from the Aerospace Center Hospital in Beijing stares at a screen with images during an interventi­onal peripheral vascular surgery.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Ding Mingchao from the Aerospace Center Hospital in Beijing stares at a screen with images during an interventi­onal peripheral vascular surgery.

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