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  1. Mount Sinai Hospital in Minneapolis was among the first private hospitals in the Twin Cities to admit minority doctors on its medical staff. The Jewish community opened it in 1951; by the time it closed in 1991, local hospitals were open to doctors of all races and religions.

  2. Mount Sinai Hospital, located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was the first non-sectarian hospital in the state. Opened in 1951 in South Minneapolis on Chicago Avenue between East 22nd Street and 24th Street, the hospital eventually merged with Metropolitan Medical Center to become Metropolitan-Mt. Sinai before dissolving in 1991.

  3. Un año más tarde, Varco (Universidad de Minnesota) realizó un bypass yeyunoileal pero el caso no se publicó así que la primera publicación al respecto la realizan Kremen y Linner (Hospital Mount Sinai, Universidad de Minnesota) en 1954 (3).

  4. Valentin Fuster, MD, PhD, President of Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital and Physician-in-Chief of The Mount Sinai Hospital. Dr. Fuster is the General Director of the National Center for Cardiovascular investigation or CNIC (equivalent to NHLBI) in Madrid, Spain.

  5. La Escuela Icahn de Medicina en Monte Sinaí (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai) es una facultad de medicina ubicada en Nueva York, en la conocida 5.ª Avenida, en las proximidades de East Harlem.

  6. Con una sólida tradición de excelencia en investigaciones científicas y tratamientos exitosos, Mount Sinai atrae pacientes de todo el mundo en busca de consultas con médicos, segundas opiniones médicas, procedimientos quirúrgicos especializados y otros tratamientos médicos internacionales.

  7. People. Trey Hedden PhD. Director of Neuroimaging and Biomarker Research in Aging and Alzheimer’s Disease. Associate Professor, Neurology, Radiology, Neuroscience. Core Lead, Biomarker Core, Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. My published work (appearing in over 85 primary research articles ...