
Mark Ratcliffe, M.D.
Professor and Vice-Chair, Department of Surgery,
UCSF
Chief of Surgery, San Francisco VA Medical Center
A gift to the Department of Surgery helps us discover new treatments and cures.
Parity for surgeon-scientists in research funding is critical for the development of new procedures and devices.
Dr. Elaine Tseng is an Assistant
Professor of Surgery in the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery at
the UCSF Medical Center. She has a special interest in the
endovascular treatment of thoracic aortic diseases, including
descending thoracic aortic aneurysms, acute and chronic type B
aortic dissection. She also has a special interest in aortic valve
surgery, ascending aortic and arch surgery, mitral valve repair,
reoperative cardiac surgery, off-pump coronary artery bypass, and
Maze procedure for atrial fibrillation.
Dr. Tseng grew up in North Carolina where she attended the North
Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. She was a National
Merit Scholar. She completed her undergraduate Bachelor of Science
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where she graduated
Phi Beta Kappa with a GPA 5.0. She earned her medical degree at
Harvard Medical School and was one of three recipients per year of
the Virginia A. Linnane Scholarship. Dr. Tseng underwent her
general surgery training at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, where she
received the George D. Zeidema Surgery Award and the Vincent L.
Gott Cardiac Surgery Award. She was inducted into the Alpha Omega
Alpha Honor Society and was awarded the Nina Braunwald Research
Fellowship Award from The Thoracic Surgery Foundation for Research
and Education. She also received the Hawley H. Seiler MD Award from
the Southern Thoracic Surgical Association. Dr. Tseng underwent her
clinical and advanced training in cardiothoracic surgery at The
Johns Hopkins Hospital.
After completing her education and training, she joined the cardiac
surgery staff at the UCSF Medical Center in 2002. She has published
scientific papers and book chapters on a wide range of topics,
including aortic valve disease, neurologic injury after cardiac
surgery, and esophageal cancer. She developed an interest in
percutaneous aortic and mitral valves and underwent specialized
endovascular training in 2006 for thoracic aortic disease. Dr.
Tseng is a member of the American Medical Association, American
Heart Association, Association of Women in Thoracic Surgery, and
Association of Women Surgeons. She is a fellow of the American
College of Surgeons and is certified by the American Board of
Surgery.