Do a fellowship in Cardiology, GI, or Pulm/CCM. You will get all the procedures you want.
Other than IR which is a fairly small subset, how is general radiology procedural? You're just generating a report into a microphone.
Radiologist here. That depends on how IR and General radiology are defined.
Some people refer to IR as this blackhole of where all radiology procedures get done, and whoever is the person doing said procedure is an interventional radiologist. I, as a radiologist, define an IR as an interventional radiology fellowship trained rad. Those are two very different things.
Generally every single radiology sub-specialty has their own specific procedures:
Neuroradiology: lumbar punctures, disc biopsy/aspiration, epidural blood patch/steroid injection.
MSK: large and small joint injection/aspiration (using fluoro/CT/ultrasound), extremity soft tissue biopsy/ablation, calcific tendonitis barbotage, etc
Body: organ biopsy using US/CT, paracentesis/thoracentesis.
Chest: debatably not different than body, but they could theoretically be doing all lung biopsies.
Mammo: stereotactic and US guided breast/lymph node biopsies
IR: venous access, arterial access, interventinal oncology, trauma embo's, PAD, stroke (though that could be considered neurointerventional), etc.... IR is also the dumping ground for all the tougher stuff that the above mentioned rads can't do.
That's not even inclusive of what I consider a procedural skillset in GI/GU fluoro.
In a general practice, where its a single rad on-site at a hospital or clinic, it'd be common to do the lower end stuff of all those categories. E.g. a typical general radiology day might include a few fluoro cases, a shoulder injection, a thyroid biopsy, a lumbar puncture, a mammo biopsy and/or (somewhat uncommonly given skill set) putting in a port or tunneled central catheter. None of that really needs a fellowship trained interventional radiologist.
The overwhelming number of lumbar punctures in community practice are done by a non-neuroradiology/non-interventional trained rad. I.e. a general rad.
(though i'm always somewhat amused/annoyed when the chart refers to the work i've done as 'IR did [XYZ] procedure'. No, I did it and i'm a neurorad)