Dr. Huddleston is a cardiac surgeon in Saint Louis, MO who provides advanced surgical care for injuries or diseases of the heart & related blood vessels.
Please Note: This link will direct you to a third-party website unaffiliated with MD.com (http://www.slu.edu/slucare-home/request-an-appointment), where you're able to request or schedule an appointment online with Dr. Charles Huddleston.
Yes, Dr. Charles B. Huddleston is accepting new patients at this office.
3635 Vista Avenue, Saint Louis, MO 63110-2539
Please Note: This link will direct you to a third-party website unaffiliated with MD.com (http://www.slu.edu/slucare-home/request-an-appointment), where you're able to request or schedule an appointment online with Dr. Charles Huddleston.
Yes, Dr. Charles B. Huddleston is accepting new patients at this office.
3655 Vista Avenue, Saint Louis, MO 63110-2539
Dr. Charles Huddleston graduated from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in 1978.
Dr. Huddleston has two offices in Missouri where he specializes in Cardiac Surgery and Thoracic Surgery.
Dr. Huddleston works with three hundred and thirty-one doctors including Dr. Joseph Duvall and Dr. Eric Pitts.
Heart and cardiovascular illnesses, such as ischemic, rheumatic, valvular, or congenital heart disease, endocarditis and atherosclerosis, affect a significant percentage of the society. Dr. Charles Huddleston is a cardiac surgeon focusing on the surgical healing of these frequent heart problems in Saint Louis, MO. He may perform procedures including heart transplant surgery, coronary artery bypass, surgical implantation of defibrillators and pacemakers, or heart valve repair.
Following rigorous and lengthy training, thoracic surgeons are uniquely qualified to perform complex surgeries on the chest, or thorax as it is sometimes called. Their focus is usually on the lungs, esophagus, and other areas of the chest, and may also include the heart. As such, Dr. Huddleston may see patients in Missouri for a wide range of surgeries, for example removing cancer causing tumors from the esophagus and chest wall, or even a lung transplant.