Initially, the interventional doctor could not make sense of anything as the superselective catheterization was not targeted. After reading through the patient's profile, though, he realized that the surgeon had no related imaging for visual reference.
It was a semi-urgent surgery.
Radiography revealed signs of abnormalities in the stratum basalis of the endometrium.
The tissue distribution was not homogeneous; it was thicker in certain areas.
What would he do in that position?
He put himself in the surgeon's shoes. In such a situation, superselection ought to be done to the 4th-grade artery. However, those arteries were extremely thin and challenging, requiring at least half an hour to successfully superselect even one.
I would take at least half a day to supeselect them all by his estimations, even though the arteriography only displayed a single side of the uterine arteries.