Ep. 410 True Lumen Re-Entry with Pioneer Plus with Dr. Thomas Davis

Ep. 410 True Lumen Re-Entry with Pioneer Plus with Dr. Thomas Davis

In this episode of BackTable Podcast, host Dr. Ally Behati invites interventional cardiologist Dr. Thomas Davis, Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Lab at St. John Hospital and Medical Center, to discuss re-entry devices, with a focus on the Pioneer Plus Catheter. Dr. Davis shares his experience in using the Pioneer Plus, an intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) guided re-entry catheter in treating critical limb ischemia (CLI), especially in cases where it is difficult to stay intraluminal. He explains a novel ‘reorientation technique’, which allows proceduralists to remain in the true lumen while treating a chronic total occlusion. Dr. Davis also describes his workflow and decision points about when to reach for the catheter. To finish the episode, he covers post-procedure patient management, imaging follow up, and opportunities to learn more about treatment of peripheral vascular disease. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR Philips Pioneer Plus https://www.usa.philips.com/healthcare/product/HCIGTDPPLUS/pioneer-plus-ivus-guided-re-entry-catheter --- SHOW NOTES 00:00 Introduction to the Back Table Podcast 02:09 Dr. Davis’ Practice in CLI Treatment 04:18 The Decision to Use the Pioneer Plus Catheter 07:31 The Reorientation Technique for Staying in the True Lumen 11:49 Using Intravascular Ultrasound to Guide Your Wire 17:33 Learning and Troubleshooting with IVUS 21:48 Preparing for Subintimal Work 28:26 Post-Procedural Management and Imaging 30:12 Advice for Proceduralists in the CLI Space --- RESOURCES Pioneer Plus Re-Entry Catheter: https://www.usa.philips.com/healthcare/product/HCIGTDPPLUS/pioneer-plus-ivus-guided-re-entry-catheter Outback Re-Entry Catheter: https://cordis.com/na/products/cross/endovascular/outback-elite-re-entry-catheter Enteer Re-Entry Catheter https://www.medtronic.com/us-en/healthcare-professionals/products/cardiovascular/chronic-total-occlusion-devices/enteer.html The Amputation Prevention Symposium (AMP) Meeting: https://www.hmpglobalevents.com/amptheclimeeting

Jaksot(614)

Ep. 220 STREAM 5th Anniversary: Stronger Than Ever! with Dr. Ari Isaacson and Dr. Sandeep Bagla

Ep. 220 STREAM 5th Anniversary: Stronger Than Ever! with Dr. Ari Isaacson and Dr. Sandeep Bagla

STREAM Meeting Founders Ari Isaacson and Sandeep Bagla tell us about what to expect at the next meeting in September, including PAE and GAE practice building tips, as well learn about new embolization procedures such as adhesive capsulitis and thyroid arterial embolization. The CME experience for this Podcast is powered by CMEfy - click here to reflect and unlock credits & more: https://earnc.me/CIj1ey --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, host Dr. Aaron Fritts and interventional radiologists Drs. Ari Isaacson and Sandeep Bagla discuss new programming for their upcoming STREAM Conference in September 2022. See our “Resources” section below for a special promotion code for BackTable listeners! As they enter their fifth year of hosting the STREAM, the doctors describe the conference’s evolution beyond procedural teaching of prostate artery embolization (PAE). This year, they will focus more programming on practical factors such as decision-making strategies, malpractice considerations (with both plaintiff and defense attorneys), and new frontiers of embolization. They highlight the increased efforts for cross-specialty collaboration, since the conference will include sessions on genicular artery, shoulder, and hemorrhoid embolization. Finally, we share more ways to learn about PAE. Our guests describe opportunities to shadow at Prostate Centers USA and request to be proctored for initial cases. --- RESOURCES The STREAM Meeting: https://www.thestreammeeting.com/ Promotion Code for 25% off registration for the STREAM Meeting: BACKTABLE22 Prostate Centers USA: https://www.prostatecentersusa.com/

29 Kesä 202228min

Ep. 219 Building an Endoleak Service Line with Dr. David Kim

Ep. 219 Building an Endoleak Service Line with Dr. David Kim

27 Kesä 202240min

Ep. 218 Building a Skillset Outside of Training with Dr. Shamit Desai

Ep. 218 Building a Skillset Outside of Training with Dr. Shamit Desai

We talk with Dr. Shamit Desai about resources and tips for endovascular and interventional specialists to continue building clinical and procedural skills beyond training. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSORS RapidAI http://rapidai.com/?utm_campaign=Evergreen&utm_source=Online&utm_medium=podcast&utm_term=Backtable&utm_content=Sponsor Medtronic AV DCB https://www.medtronic.com/avdata --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, host Dr. Aaron Fritts and interventional radiologist Dr. Shamit Desai discuss resources and tips for IRs to continue building clinical and procedural skills beyond residency and fellowship training. The doctors start by recognizing that every training program has specific focuses, which influence the skills that IRs have when they first emerge from the program. With the breadth of IR procedures available today, there are many service lines that are not addressed in formal training. However, Dr. Desai believes that any graduating IR has a foundation of proficient catheter skills and they have the potential to learn most image guided procedures. Dr. Desai emphasizes that a big part of building a new skill set is having the support to learn the skills and let it flourish. He recounts his path to learning how to treat kyphoplasty and PAD and the integral role that IR mentors and device companies played in helping him develop knowledge and confidence. Dr. Desai also advises listeners to branch out into reading journals from other specialties. WIth PAD, he highly recommends learning from the Journal of Vascular Surgery (JVS), which can provide valuable perspective on clinical management. We also highlight national conferences that are tailored specifically to educate on certain procedures. Additionally, Dr. Desai emphasizes that it is important for each IR to identify their true passion. Passion fuels the drive to learn as much as possible about a procedure, which leads to better outcomes for patients. It is also important to have clinical infrastructure in place before marketing the service line to patients and referrers, in order to create a quality patient experience. --- RESOURCES Ep. 198- Privademics and Advantages of Lesser Known Community Programs with Dr. Shamit Desai and Dr. Saud Ahmed: https://www.backtable.com/shows/vi/podcasts/198/privademics-advantages-of-lesser-known-community-programs Ep. 210- Modern Vertebral Augmentation with Dr. Doug Beall: https://www.backtable.com/shows/vi/podcasts/210/modern-vertebral-augmentation Vertebral Augmentation by Dr. Douglas Beall: https://www.amazon.com/Vertebral-Augmentation-Comprehensive-Vertebroplasty-Kyphoplasty/dp/1684200156 Medtronic OsteoCool System: https://www.medtronic.com/us-en/healthcare-professionals/products/spinal-orthopaedic/tumor-management/osteocool-ablation-system-rf.html Vascupedia: https://vascupedia.com/ Dr. Srini Tummala’s YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/DrTummalasVascularChannel?app=desktop Journal of Vascular Surgery (JVS): https://www.jvascsurg.org/ SIR Y90 Course: https://www.sirweb.org/learning-center/meetings/y-90-the-complete-course/ SIR LEARN Conference: https://www.sirweb.org/learning-center/meetings/2022-learn-and-active-meeting/ AMP (Amputation Prevention) Symposium: https://www.amptheclimeeting.com/ NCVH (New Cardiovascular Horizons) Conference: https://ncvh.org/meeting/ncvh-2022/ OEIS (Outpatient Endovascular and Interventional Society) Conference: https://oeisociety.com/

24 Kesä 202245min

Ep. 217 Building a Comprehensive Women’s Health Practice: Collaboration with GYN with Dr. Mark Hoffman and Dr. Merve Ozen

Ep. 217 Building a Comprehensive Women’s Health Practice: Collaboration with GYN with Dr. Mark Hoffman and Dr. Merve Ozen

Dr. Merve Ozen, interventional radiologist, and Dr. Mark Hoffman, minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon (MIGS), discuss how collaboration between IR and gynecologic surgery provides comprehensive medical, surgical, and interventional treatment options for women suffering from uterine fibroids, pelvic congestion syndrome and other causes of chronic pelvic pain. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSORS Athletic Greens https://www.athleticgreens.com/backtablevi Medtronic AV DCB https://www.medtronic.com/avdata --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, host Dr. Aparna Baheti interviews Dr. Merve Ozen, interventional radiologist, and Dr. Mark Hoffman, minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon (MIGS) about how collaboration between IR and gynecologic surgery provides comprehensive medical, surgical, and interventional treatment options for women suffering from uterine fibroids, pelvic congestion syndrome and other causes of chronic pelvic pain. Drs. Hoffmann and Ozen began a combined clinic after a discussion between their two departments. Though IRs were enthusiastic about performing uterine fibroid embolization (UFE), they were not able to due to a lack of referring gynecologists. Dr. Hoffman was interested in this collaboration, and he knew a very supportive and motivated nurse who wanted to lead this initiative. He says that despite pushback from other MIGs in his department, he had a supportive department chair who allowed the project to go forward. Next, Dr. Ozen describes a day in their collaborative clinic. She begins by reviewing imaging and patients for the day, ordering new imaging if needed, and discussing patients with Dr. Hoffman. They each see their patients which takes about 45 minutes per visit due to the complexity of chronic pelvic pain and the many potential causes and contributing factors. Some patients require meeting with both physicians to discuss all options. They see four to five patients each day. Every day runs differently depending on the patients and their individual needs, but it runs smoothly due to the supportive nursing staff. Dr. Hoffman discusses medical management including birth control pills, which are often a first-line option or an option for someone who wants the least invasive treatment. He also offers hysterectomy (laparoscopic, robotic, vaginal, abdominal) for women who wish to never have more uterine bleeding, and myomectomy, with hysteroscopic myomectomy being the most minimally invasive and allowing patients to go home the same day after recovering from anesthesia. Dr. Ozen discusses UFE and treatments for other causes of pelvic pain. She does hypogastric nerve blocks for pain, ovarian vein embolization for pelvic congestion syndrome, and cryoablation for chronic pelvic pain. She has also been able to treat some unique ectopic pregnancies that Dr. Hoffman has seen, including a cervical and an abdominal ectopic pregnancy which provided lifesaving treatment without invasive surgical evacuation. --- RESOURCES BackTable Ep. 199: Advanced Minimially Invasive Pain Interventions with Dr. Prologo: https://www.backtable.com/shows/vi/podcasts/199/advanced-minimally-invasive-pain-interventions Non-surgical management of abdominal ectopic pregnancy with uterine artery embolization: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35321265/

20 Kesä 202246min

Police Presence in Medical Spaces with Dr. Jamal Jefferson

Police Presence in Medical Spaces with Dr. Jamal Jefferson

In this episode of our Health Equity Series, guest host Dr. Vishal Kumar interviews emergency medicine resident Dr. Jamal Jefferson about the presence of law enforcement in emergency rooms and challenges with patient privacy and trust in the healthcare system. The CME experience for this Podcast is powered by CMEfy - click here to reflect and unlock credits & more: https://earnc.me/1zdevF --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, guest host Dr. Vishal Kumar interviews emergency medicine resident Dr. Jamal Jefferson about the presence of law enforcement in emergency rooms and its effects on patient privacy and trust in the healthcare system. Dr. Jefferson explains the role that the emergency department plays in his community. He outlines its medical role, as well as its extension into “social emergency medicine.” This term refers to the fact that the ED can be an important access point to services that could improve social determinants of health. Overall the ED often sees community members in their most vulnerable states, and it has the opportunity to track trends in community needs. Next, the doctors discuss how healthcare providers can be unknowingly complicit in further injustices to their patients. Dr. Jefferson urges physicians to think about the ramifications of their actions. For example, using a 5150 code to place a patient on psychiatric hold could affect court decisions and child custody outcomes in the future. Furthermore, when patient belongings are being itemized in a public space such as the ED, this routine procedure could trigger a downstream search/seizure, interrogation, and detainment of the patient. Dr. Jefferson emphasizes the importance of being an active participant in protecting patient privacy. In his patient encounters, he separates the police from the doctor-patient relationship and dispels the idea that the medical team will report protected health information to the police. He explicitly lets patients know that the preceding events that brought them to the hospital do not have an impact on how he will treat them. Additionally, the negative experience of a single patient will send a ripple effect through the community. The patient’s friends and family members may trust the ED less, which delays care and increases morbidity and mortality. Finally, the doctors highlight important research and court rulings over the criminalization of patients. --- RESOURCES A National Evaluation of the Effect of Trauma-Center Care on Mortality: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmsa052049 Police Brutality and Black Health: Setting the Agenda for Public Health Scholars: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5388955/ Policing the Emergency Room (Harvard Law Review): https://harvardlawreview.org/2021/06/policing-the-emergency-room/ Weapons Use Among Hospital Security Personnel: https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.iahss.org/resource/collection/48907176-3B11-4B24-A7C0-FF756143C7DE/2014_Weapons_use_among_hosptial_security_personnel.pdf Ferguson vs. Charleston: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/532/67/ #WhiteCoatsForBlackLives — Addressing Physicians’ Complicity in Criminalizing Communities: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2023305

17 Kesä 202244min

Ep. 216 Stick It — Glue Embo with Dr. Ziv Haskal

Ep. 216 Stick It — Glue Embo with Dr. Ziv Haskal

In this episode, host Dr. Aparna Baheti interviews interventional radiologist Dr. Ziv Haskal about the use of glue in peripheral applications. They discuss how to prepare and inject glue for portal vein embolization, type 2 endoleaks, and Dr. Haskal’s glue bullet technique. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR RADPAD® Radiation Protection https://www.radpad.com/ --- SHOW NOTES Dr. Ziv Haskal talks us through the use of glue in peripheral applications. He discusses how to prepare and inject glue for portal vein embolization, how to do the same for type 2 endoleaks, and also shares his glue bullet technique. Glue is only approved for neurointerventional procedures in the US, though there are many off-label uses where glue is the superior embolic. The benefit of glue is the power it gives to the operator. By manipulating the oil to glue ratio and thus the viscosity, the operator has control of how far the glue will travel when injected which makes it a very versatile liquid embolic. Dr. Haskal commonly uses glue for portal vein, bronchial, lumbar and intercostal embolizations as well as in coagulopathic patients. Dr. Haskal advises that one of the easiest places to start using glue is portal vein embolization. To prepare glue for a procedure, Dr. Haskal separates it from the rest of the back table, and always uses new gloves and a separate set of equipment. For a portal vein embolization, Dr. Haskal runs a microcatheter paraxially alongside the safety wire and makes U-turns into portal vein branches that he is targeting. For treating renal pseudoaneurysm or for finishing a coil embolization, Dr. Haskal uses the glue bullet method, which involves loading a syringe with dextrose and only a tiny amount of glue at the top of the syringe. Regarding complications of glue, Dr. Haskal says that though many fear the glue solidifying and causing the catheter to get stuck in a vessel, the likelihood of this is near zero because the glue does not harden fast enough for this to happen. The most common complication is over embolization and downstream spillage, which can be problematic in end organ supply vessels. Finally, Dr. Haskel explains his technique for when the glue starts solidifying around the catheter which creates a glue tail catheter is drawn back. --- RESOURCES Glue for Type 2 Endoleak: https://www.jvir.org/article/S1051-0443(18)30849-2/fulltext Global Embolization and Symposium Technologies (GEST): https://www.gestweb.org

13 Kesä 202233min

Ep. 215 Radiologist as Spine and Pain Specialist with Dr. John Michels

Ep. 215 Radiologist as Spine and Pain Specialist with Dr. John Michels

Jacob Fleming interviews interventional pain specialist and former Super Bowl champion John S. Michels about his journey into the subspecialty, pathways for getting involved in interventional pain management, and his philosophy on comprehensive patient care. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR RADPAD® Radiation Protection https://www.radpad.com/ --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/1DSmJG --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, host Dr. Jacob Fleming interviews interventional pain specialist and former Super Bowl champion Dr. John Michels about his journey into the subspecialty, pathways for getting involved in interventional pain management, and his philosophy on comprehensive patient care. Dr. Michels describes his first career as an NFL player with the Green Bay Packers and how it taught him to be comfortable with external pressures and delayed gratification. He recounts the knee injury that led to an early retirement from the field, as well as interactions with radiologists, surgeons, and rehabilitation specialists that got him thinking about entering the field of medicine. He ended up pursuing a diagnostic residency at Baylor University, and then an additional interventional pain fellowship at the University of California at Irvine. Throughout his training, he recognizes that there is great synergistic benefit when specialists team up to provide multidisciplinary care and teach each other different skills. For example, he refined his physical exam skills by working with a PM&R physician, and he also taught other physicians how to read imaging. Dr. Michels believes that the most gratifying part of his career is the opportunity to diagnose, treat, and follow up with patients. In his Dallas-based independent OBL, he splits his time between clinic and procedural days. He enjoys seeing the impact that his interventions have on patients, and he is committed to providing alternatives to opioid use. Dr. Michels encourages more radiologists to explore the field of interventional pain, which is now recognized as a radiology subspecialty by the American Board of Radiology. Overall, when imaging is combined with physical examination and history-taking, the patient will enjoy the benefits of better diagnosis and care. --- RESOURCES Dr. John Michel’s Website: https://www.johnmichelsmd.com/ Interventional Spine & Pain: http://www.spinedallas.com/ ABR Pain Medicine Subspecialty: https://www.theabr.org/radiation-oncology/subspecialties/pain-medicine UC Irvine Pain Fellowship: https://anesthesiology.uci.edu/education-fellowships-pain-medicine.shtml

10 Kesä 202259min

Ep. 214 Building a GAE Practice in the OBL with Dr. David Wood

Ep. 214 Building a GAE Practice in the OBL with Dr. David Wood

Dr. David Wood, interventional radiologist and chief medical officer of Advantage IR, tells us about his experiences with geniculate artery embolization (GAE) practice building in the office-based lab (OBL). --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR Athletic Greens https://www.athleticgreens.com/backtablevi --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/oIF49Q --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, host Dr. Michael Barraza interviews Dr. David Wood, interventional radiologist and chief medical officer of Advantage IR, about building office based labs (OBLs), the untapped potential of the geniculate artery embolization (GAE) market, and how to build patient referrals for new OBLs. We begin by discussing why Dr. Wood chose to do geniculate artery embolization (GAE) in his OBLs. He says that GAE makes a great procedure for an office setting because it is relatively easy, only requiring a C arm with digital subtraction angiography (DSA). It is also a quick procedure with little side effects and low rates of complications. He says that patients who get GAE are a unique patient population because they know they have arthritis, and have exhausted conservative measures or declined treatment options that they have been offered, which are often quite invasive. Dr. Wood says his GAE patients are mostly self-referred. He has marketing liaisons for local clinics, but what he has found most effective is TV commercials in English and Spanish, because this reaches the populations that need the most help. His patient population for GAEs consists mostly of self referred patients, as well as referrals from PCPs and occasionally orthopedic or sports medicine providers. Regarding how Dr. Wood evaluates which patients to treat, he says that he began by using the point of maximal tenderness as described by Sandeep Bagla and required MRI before patient selection. He now uses primarily X-ray and only treats pain rated at least 5 out of 10. He does not do GAE in patients who have had knee surgery or with a history of significant PAD or calcification seen on preoperative X-ray. He generally tells patients they can expect up to a 70% improvement of pain after geniculate artery embolization. --- RESOURCES BackTable Ep. 27: Geniculate Artery Embolization for OA with Dr. Sandeep Bagla and Dr. Ari Isaacson https://www.backtable.com/shows/vi/podcasts/27/geniculate-artery-embolization-for-osteoarthritis BackTable Ep. 85: Genicular Artery Embolization for OA with Dr. Jafar Golzarian https://www.backtable.com/shows/vi/podcasts/85/genicular-artery-embolization-for-oa Bagla GAE Publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31837946/ Padia GAE Publication: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8542160/

6 Kesä 20221h 7min

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