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Zachary L. Bercu, MD

Dr. Zachary L. Bercu is Assistant Professor in the Division of Interventional Radiology and Image-Guided Medicine at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia, and is Assistant Program Director for Interventional Radiology Residency and Fellowship at Emory. Dr. Bercu is Assistant Site Director of Interventional Radiology at Emory University Hospital Midtown and serves on the Steering Committee for the Georgia Center for Medical Robotics. He is a graduate of Harvard University and the Emory University School of Medicine. He performed his residency in Diagnostic Radiology and his fellowship in Vascular and Interventional Radiology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, New York. His clinical, research, and educational interests include rapid innovation integration in the angiosuite, locoregional therapies including selective internal radiotherapy with Yttrium-90, chemoembolization, and ablation, prostate artery embolization, uterine artery embolization, transradial interventions, embolization guidance technology, peripheral arterial disease, central venous stenosis and endovascular simulation.

Specialties

  • Interventional Radiology
  • Diagnostic Radiology

Board Certifications

  • American Board of Radiology

Fellowships

  • Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Affiliations

  • Emory

Education & Training

  • Medical School: Emory University School of Medicine
  • Internship: Saint Vincent Catholic Medical
  • Residency: Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Honors & Awards

Vascular Interventional Advances (VIVA) Face-Off Competition Scholarship, "Caval Agenesis Requiring Thrombolysis and Inferior Vena Cava Reconstruction," VIVA 2014, Las Vegas, Nevada

Distinguished Reviewer, Top 8 Reviewers of 2015 (out of 700 total reviewe

Publications

Compton MT, Bercu Z, Bollini A, Walker EF. Factor structure of the Neurological Evaluation Scale in a predominantly African American sample of patients with schizophrenia, unaffected relatives, and non-psychiatric controls. Schizophrenia Research 2006;84: