Geriatric Medicine
Physician insights on aging-related care, polypharmacy management, cognitive decline, and geriatric syndromes.
Recent Discussions
In an older adult hospitalized with recurrent falls, weight loss, without clear injuries, but with an inconsistent or difficult-to-reach caregiver, what findings would make you formally report suspected elder neglect and/or abuse?
I'm so glad that you're thinking about the possibility of abuse/neglect in this scenario! It's important to have it on our differential, or we'll always miss this diagnosis. First, it would be good to see if the patient can explain what is happening and provide contextual information that veers us a...
What are the clinical prompts that lead you to consider deprescribing bisphosphonate therapy in older adults with osteoporosis?
As a Geriatrician, the essence of my practice is to determine, on regular review (reconciliation), whether an older adult’s medication is appropriate to continue or continue at the same dosing on the basis of physiology, pathology, and/or risk modification. We know well today that medications for os...
What is your antipsychotic of choice and general titration regimen in the outpatient setting for a patient with dementia and behavioral disturbances (assuming reversible causes such as urinary retention, constipation, etc. have been addressed)?
While not set in stone and knowing that there is a black box warning, make sure you get informed consent. I start with low doses of quetiapine (12.5 to 25 mg), as it has the shortest half-life, and will use it twice or 3 times a day. This allows for quicker recovery if they are too sedated. Dependin...
What is your approach to the management of asymptomatic bacteriuria in an elderly patient without clear urinary symptoms but with cognitive changes and falls?
Asymptomatic bacteruria does not cause altered mental status. Data suggests that when we attribute acute changes to it, we will be wrong about 85% of the time, thereby missing the true etiology. It is a difficult thing to educate staff of senior living facilities and families who have been told it w...
What is your approach to the use of GLP-1 agonists in older adults with diabetes with or at risk of sarcopenia?
This is an important question to keep an eye on, given the broadening use and effectiveness of GLP-1 agonists for various conditions, especially diabetes, and for weight loss. Unfortunately, as is so often the case, major clinical trials in this area do not reflect the heterogeneity of older adults ...
How do you decide between anticoagulation and observation for an incidentally detected subsegmental pulmonary embolism in elderly patients with a history of gastrointestinal bleeding?
We face this conundrum not infrequently because subsegmental emboli are subject to high inter-reader variability, and the accuracy of the finding in isolation is suspect (Batayneh et al., Blood 2023). I once mentioned this to a radiologist who reads CTAs and was told, tactfully, that I was full of i...
When stopping denosumab and transitioning to PO bisphosphonate, do you wait for 6 months after the last denosumab injection to start PO bisphosphonate?
Some background: In patients discontinuing denosumab without subsequent antiresorptive therapy, BMD rapidly reverts back to baseline with an elevation in vertebral fracture risk (with an enhanced risk of multiple vertebral fractures). Thus, sequential treatment regimens following denosumab have been...
How do you decide when an older patient's weight loss warrants an extensive workup versus a more focused or watchful approach?
I always start with the standard cut off of 5% of normal body weight in 6-12 months. If this cut-off is met, then I probe about intentional or unintentional. Many older adults are not eating enough protein (they need more than the RDA recommendation) -- I encourage 1-1.3 (sometimes 1.5) g/kg protein...
In light of recent measles outbreaks in the US, would you recommend an MMR booster for immunocompetent patients born before 1957?
I would not recommend a measles vaccine for a person born before 1957. This year has been chosen because people before born before 1957 have a very very high likelihood of having had measles because virtually all children got this highly contagious disease. On the other hand, there is no harm to get...
How did the SPRINT MIND study influence your approach to blood pressure management in older patients at risk of dementia?
In general, results from SPRINT MIND as well as other studies of blood pressure management in older adults have changed my thinking from being conservative in blood pressure management to favoring more aggressive management in patients able to tolerate higher doses or additional medications for bloo...