Imai Keisuke, Hamanaka Masashi, Yamada Takehiro, Yamazaki Hidekazu, Yamamoto Atsushi, Tsuto Kazuma, Takegami Tetsuro, Umezawa Kunihiko, Ikeda Eito, Mizuno Toshiki
Department of Neurology and Stroke Treatment, Kyoto First Red Cross Hospital.
Rinsho Shinkeigaku. 2014;54(12):1203-6. doi: 10.5692/clinicalneurol.54.1203.
Emergency neuroendovascular revascularization is a reperfusion therapy for acute stroke. The operator for this therapy has to obtain a license as a specialist in endovascular procedures. For neurologists wishing to acquire this license, there are two kinds of training programs: full-time training and concurrent training. Full-time training was chosen by the first author of this review, while concurrent training will be performed by staff in the author's department. The advantage of full-time training is the acquisition of a lot of experience of various diseases that are treated with endovascular procedures and managed in the periprocedural period. However, full-time training has the disadvantages of a requirement to discontinue medical care of neurological diseases except for stroke and employment at a remote institution. The advantages and disadvantages of concurrent training are the reverse of those of full-time training. Neither training system can succeed without cooperation from Departments of Neurology in neighboring universities and the institutional Department of Neurosurgery. It is particularly important for each neurologist to establish a goal of becoming an operator for recanalization therapy alone or for all fields of endovascular procedures because training will differ for attainment of each operator's goal.