Gastrointestinal Vascular Disease
Treatment in
Stockton, CA
Minimally invasive interventional radiology treatments for GI vascular conditions — TIPS, mesenteric ischemia, hemorrhoid embolization, and GI bleeding control.
Overview
When GI Symptoms Have a Vascular Root Cause
Many gastrointestinal conditions have a vascular root cause — and minimally invasive, image-guided procedures can treat them without the risks and recovery time of open surgery. At Aria Vascular, our board-certified interventional radiologists specialize in GI vascular conditions including mesenteric ischemia, portal hypertension and its complications, hemorrhoidal disease, and GI bleeding.
As the only comprehensive, multidisciplinary vascular center in San Joaquin County, we offer advanced endovascular solutions that identify and address the underlying vascular causes of GI disease — right here in Stockton, often when no other treatment has succeeded.
⚠ Frequently Misdiagnosed for Years
Conditions like mesenteric ischemia are often misdiagnosed as IBS, gastritis, or functional GI disorders for years before the vascular cause is identified. If you have persistent GI symptoms that haven’t responded to standard treatment, a vascular evaluation may reveal the answer. Call (209) 226-4300.
Conditions We Treat
GI Vascular Conditions We Treat
Aria Vascular specializes in four GI vascular conditions where interventional radiology offers unique and effective treatment options that are not available through gastroenterology or general surgery alone.
Mesenteric Ischemia
Restricted blood flow to the intestines due to narrowed mesenteric arteries — causing severe pain after eating, fear of food, and significant weight loss.
- Severe pain 15–60 min after eating
- Fear of eating (sitophobia)
- Unintentional weight loss
- Nausea or diarrhea after meals
- Abdominal bruit on exam
Portal Hypertension
Elevated pressure in the portal vein — most commonly from cirrhosis — causing life-threatening complications that require specialized vascular intervention.
- Esophageal / gastric varices
- Variceal bleeding (emergency)
- Refractory ascites
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Hepatic hydrothorax
Hemorrhoidal Disease
Enlarged rectal veins causing persistent bleeding, discomfort, and reduced quality of life — now treatable without surgical excision through embolization.
- Chronic rectal bleeding
- Hemorrhoid prolapse (grade II–III)
- Not improved with conservative care
- Discomfort affecting daily life
- Seeking non-surgical option
GI Bleeding
Bleeding anywhere along the GI tract that cannot be reached or controlled through endoscopy — treated with precision catheter-directed embolization.
- Upper or lower GI bleeding
- Failed endoscopic control
- Bleeding beyond endoscopic reach
- High surgical risk patients
- Recurrent GI hemorrhage
Our Procedures
GI Vascular Treatments at Aria Vascular
Mesenteric Angioplasty & Stenting
A catheter inserted at the wrist or groin is guided to the narrowed mesenteric artery using real-time X-ray imaging. A tiny balloon opens the blockage and a stent holds the artery open — restoring blood flow to the intestines. Most patients experience dramatic relief from post-meal pain within days and can resume eating normally shortly after.
- No abdominal incision
- Same-day discharge
- Much shorter recovery than bypass surgery
- Local anesthesia + sedation
- Relief often within days
- Can be repeated if needed
TIPS — Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt
TIPS is the gold-standard interventional procedure for managing life-threatening complications of portal hypertension. Through a catheter inserted in the neck vein, our interventional radiologists create a channel (shunt) inside the liver connecting the portal vein to the hepatic vein — rapidly relieving pressure in the portal system without open surgery.
TIPS is highly effective for controlling refractory ascites, preventing recurrent variceal bleeding, and managing hepatic hydrothorax. It also serves as a bridge to liver transplantation. Most patients are discharged within 1–2 days with close follow-up to monitor shunt function.
- No open abdominal surgery
- 1–2 day hospital stay
- Performed under sedation
- Bridge to transplant
Hemorrhoid Embolization (Emborrhoid)
Hemorrhoid embolization is a minimally invasive alternative to surgical hemorrhoidectomy. Through a tiny catheter at the wrist, our interventional radiologists identify and selectively block (embolize) the superior rectal arteries supplying blood to the hemorrhoids — causing them to shrink without any incision in or around the rectum. No postoperative rectal pain. Home the same day.
- No rectal incision
- Outpatient — same-day
- Back to normal in 1–2 days
- No postoperative rectal pain
- Light sedation only
- Excellent safety profile
GI Bleeding Embolization
When GI bleeding cannot be controlled through endoscopy, catheter-directed embolization offers a precision alternative to emergency open surgery. Our interventional team performs mesenteric angiography — real-time X-ray imaging of the GI blood vessels — to precisely locate the bleeding vessel, then seals it with coils, particles, or specialized glue. Particularly valuable for elderly or medically complex patients who cannot tolerate surgery.
Know Your Options
Endovascular IR vs. Open Surgery — At a Glance
| Factor | Endovascular / IR Approach | Open Surgery |
|---|---|---|
| Incision | Tiny catheter entry point | Large abdominal incision |
| Anesthesia | Local + sedation | General anesthesia |
| Hospital Stay | Same-day or 1–2 nights ✓ | 3–7 days or more |
| Recovery | Days ✓ | Weeks to months |
| GI Bleeding Control | Catheter-directed precision | Exploratory surgery |
| Portal HTN Management | TIPS — no open surgery ✓ | Surgical shunts — high risk |
| Hemorrhoid Treatment | No rectal incision ✓ | Surgical excision with pain |
| High-Risk Patients | Often suitable ✓ | Higher operative risk |
Our Advantage
Why Central Valley Patients Choose Aria Vascular
| What Matters | The Aria Vascular Advantage |
|---|---|
| Full range of GI IR procedures | TIPS, mesenteric angioplasty, hemorrhoid embolization, and GI bleeding control — all available locally in Stockton |
| Board-certified IR + vascular surgery team | Complex GI vascular conditions benefit from our multidisciplinary team working together — no need for separate specialist referrals |
| Treats conditions others miss | We specialize in vascular causes of GI disease — including mesenteric ischemia and portal hypertension complications — that are frequently overlooked |
| Local Central Valley access | No need to travel to Sacramento or the Bay Area for TIPS or advanced GI vascular procedures |
| Coordinated with your GI team | We work directly with your gastroenterologist, hepatologist, and primary care physician for integrated, seamless care |
Your Care Journey
What to Expect at Aria Vascular
Initial Consultation
A thorough review of your GI symptoms, medical history, prior workup, and existing imaging. We discuss the vascular causes of your condition, explain all treatment options clearly, and order any additional imaging needed for procedure planning.
Your Procedure
Most GI IR procedures are performed under local anesthesia with light sedation. Mesenteric angioplasty, hemorrhoid embolization, and GI bleeding embolization are typically same-day. TIPS requires a 1–2 day hospital stay for post-procedure monitoring. Our team walks you through every step.
Recovery & Follow-Up
Mesenteric angioplasty patients often experience pain relief within days and resume eating normally soon after. Hemorrhoid embolization patients return to activities in 1–2 days. TIPS patients receive follow-up Doppler ultrasound to assess shunt function. All care is coordinated with your gastroenterologist or hepatologist.
Serving the Central Valley
GI Vascular Care Near You
Aria Vascular serves patients throughout San Joaquin County and the broader Central Valley. We accept referrals from gastroenterologists, hepatologists, primary care physicians, and surgeons throughout the region. To refer a patient, call (209) 226-4300.
Stockton
Modesto
Lodi
Tracy
Manteca
Turlock
Merced
Elk Grove
San Joaquin County
Common Questions
GI Vascular Disease FAQs
What is mesenteric ischemia and how is it treated?
What is a TIPS procedure and when is it needed?
Is hemorrhoid embolization effective for treating hemorrhoids?
Can interventional radiology stop GI bleeding without surgery?
How do I know if my abdominal pain is caused by a vascular problem?
Does Aria Vascular accept insurance for GI vascular procedures?
GI Symptoms That Won't Resolve?
Schedule a GI vascular consultation — the answer may be in your blood vessels, not your gut.
Procedures We Offer
- Mesenteric Angioplasty & Stenting
- TIPS Procedure
- Hemorrhoid Embolization
- GI Bleeding Embolization
- Visceral Aneurysm Treatment
Practice Information
Address
1611 W March Lane Stockton, CA 95207
Hours
Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Sat–Sun: Closed
Phone
(209) 226-4300
Fax
(209) 227-1477
GI Symptoms That Won't Resolve? The Answer May Be Vascular.
Many gastrointestinal conditions have a vascular root cause that goes undetected for years. Aria Vascular specializes in finding and treating the vascular source — using minimally invasive techniques right here in Stockton.