
Washington Health first began offering open heart surgery (Coronary Artery Bypass surgery) to our community more than 30 years ago.
Today, we continue to provide world-class cardiac care and with our affiliation with UCSF Health, we can provide academic-level care with the convenience of local treatment. UCSF is ranked as one of the best hospitals in the nation for Cardiology and Heart Surgery, according to U.S. News & World Report. “Our collaboration gives the community direct access to a level of specialized cardiac care rivaling the most advanced academic centers in the country,” says cardiac surgeon Ramin E. Beygui, MD, Washington Health’s medical director of Cardiac Surgery and a faculty member at UCSF Medical Center.
Ramin E. Beygui, MD, FACS, has concurrently joined UCSF School of Medicine
Faculty in the Division of Adult Cardiothoracic Surgery and assumed the
position of medical director of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Washington Health
Health System. Dr. Beygui has practiced cardiac, thoracic, and vascular
surgery for the past 15 years at UCLA and Stanford University Medical
Centers and will be practicing the entire scope of his experience and
expertise. This includes repair of aortic aneurysms and dissections, minimally
invasive and cardiac surgery for structural heart disease and coronary
disease, and cardiopulmonary transplantation. He has served as the director
of Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm at UCLA, the surgical director of lung and
heart-lung transplantation at Stanford University Medical Center and Lucile
Packard Children's Hospital, and medical director of cardiac, thoracic,
and vascular surgery at North Bay Medical Center.
Teng C. Lee, MD, FACS, joined UCSF as an Associate Professor of Surgery
in the Division of Adult Cardiothoracic Surgery. He was previously the
Co-Director of the Aorta Center at University of Florida. Prior to that,
he founded the Center for Aortic Disease at University of Maryland and
also started the highly successful Transcatheter Aortic Valve (TAVR) program
there. Originally from Singapore, he graduated from Washington University
School of Medicine in Saint Louis. He then went on to a general surgery
residency at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland where he was
also the Dudley P. Allen Scholar before finishing his cardiothoracic surgery
residency at Duke University. He also completed a fellowship in Endovascular/Interventional
Radiology at Skåne University Hospital (Lund University) in Malmö,
Sweden where he trained under the world-renowned Krassi Ivancev, M.D.,
Ph.D. and another fellowship in advanced aortic surgery, heart transplantation,
and mechanical circulatory support at Duke University. Dr. Lee is one
of only a handful of "hybrid" specialists fully cross-trained
in both interventional and open surgical techniques for the treatment
of complex thoracic aortic disease.
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