Top Docs ’14: Vascular Surgery

By Seattle Mag June 12, 2014

This article originally appeared in the July 2014 issue of Seattle magazine.

!–paging_filter–pTreatment for diseases of the arteries and veins (excluding the heart) through medical therapy, minimally-invasive catheter procedures and surgical reconstruction/p
pstrongYi Soo Robert Kim, M.D./strong, vascular surgery, endovascular therapy; The Polyclinic, 1145 Broadway, Seattle, 206.320.3100, The Polyclinic Edmonds, 7315 212th St. SW, Suite 205, Edmonds, 425.775.1865; Swedish Medical Center, Swedish Edmonds; University of Illinois, Chicago, 2000/p
pstrongBenjamin M. Lerner, M.D./strong, vascular surgery, aortic aneurysm; Northwest Hospital Medical Center, Seattle Pacific Surgeons, 1560 N 115th St., Suite 102, Seattle, 206.368.1070; Northwest Hospital Medical Center; University of Wisconsin, 2010/p
pstrongWilliam Charles McQuinn**, M.D./strong, stroke prevention, endovascular treatment of aortic aneurysm; Group Health, Capitol Hill campus, 201 16th Ave. E, Seattle, 206.326.3000; Group Health Cooperative, Swedish Medical Center, Overlake Hospital Medical Center; University of Mississippi, 1980/p
pstrongDaniel F. Neuzil, M.D./strong; Virginia Mason Hospital Seattle Medical Center, 1100 Ninth Ave., Seattle, 206.223.6637; Virginia Mason; Johns Hopkins University, 1987/p
pstrong Edmond J. Raker, M.D./strong, vascular and endovascular surgery, abdominal aortic aneurysms, carotid artery disease, open and endovascular treatments for insufficient arterial supply to legs; Virginia Mason Hospital Seattle Medical Center, 1100 Ninth Ave., Seattle, 206.223.6950; Virginia Mason; Harvard University, 1974/p

 

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