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How do you manage patients with ice-pick headaches?

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Neurology · Greater Boston Headache Center at Boston Advanced Medicine

Ice-pick headaches, previously known as jabs & jolts and now often referred to as stabbing headaches, also manifest as stabbing face pain, which can be mistaken for trigeminal neuralgia due to lack of awareness. They can strike the head or the face suddenly, resembling lightning bolts. While common ...

How frequently do you check serum electrolytes for patients on CRRT?

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Nephrology · University Of California San Francisco Medical Center At Parnassus

When starting out CVVH and with unstable patients who have very abnormal electrolytes, as often as even every 6 hours. In patients who have been on stable dose of cvvh and electrolytes are within goal, even twice a day may be enough.

In patients presenting with classical findings of primary hyperparathyroidism (i.e mild hypercalcemia, high 24hr urine calcium, elevated 1,25 Vit D but normal PTH), can spontaneous normalization of calcium be explained by episodic hypersecretion of PTH?

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Endocrinology · University of Missouri School of Medicine

PTH secretion is always about 70% basal, related to the mass of parathyroid tissue, and about 30% episodic. Patients with primary hyperparathyroidism can have superimposed secondary hyperparathyroidism. High urinary calcium suggests a negative calcium balance. PTH is not "normal" if calcium levels a...

What is the optimal management of pain and loss of function due to pathologic compression fractures?

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Endocrinology · Boston University School of Medicine

I explain to my patients if they have an acute compression fracture that they are likely to experience pain for approximately 2-3 weeks that will gradually resolve. I often give them some type of pain relief using Tylenol or ibuprofen and if severe, a more potent analgesic for a short period of time...

When would you consider treatment with steroids in patients with diabetic radiculoplexus neuropathy?

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Neurology · University of Minnesota

Steroids (pulse IV methylprednisolone) are the only treatment for diabetic amyotrophy supported by randomized placebo controlled trial (Dyck PJB et al., Neurology 2006; 66(5, Suppl 2):A191.) The soonest the treatment is started after onset of symptoms, the best. I will treat most patients presenting...

What is your approach in differentiating IPAF (interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features) versus "CTD ILD" in patients with serologic abnormalities but do not fulfill criteria for autoimmune disease?

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Rheumatology · University of Washington

Even for those of us who work in ILD clinics, this can be a challenging issue. The concept of IPAF (interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features) was developed in 2015 jointly by the ATS and the ERS for study purposes and as such is somewhat helpful in the clinic. Much like classification criteri...

Have you incorporated the use of steroids for patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia?

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Infectious Disease · Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis

Yes, the evidence is pointing toward starting steroids (hydrocortisone at 200mg total daily dose) early (in the first 24 hours) in patients with severe CAP who do NOT have influenza. In septic shock caused by CAP, steroid recs follow the septic shock guidelines. Dequin et al., PMID 36942789 showed t...

Do you consider late latent syphilis adequately treated if a patient receives a 10-14 day course of IV ceftriaxone for another indication?

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Infectious Disease · Yale School of Medicine

This is a great question and not uncommon scenario. First, I would emphasize the importance of accurately staging the patient as 'late latent' and be sure there are no current signs or symptoms concerning for neurosyphilis, ocular, or otic (even before the IV CTX was given). Having said that, the bo...

What infectious prophylaxis do you use for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma?

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Medical Oncology · University of Washington, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Excellent question for sure. In order of controversial nature/lack of evidence/lack of consensus around evidence: 1) Antiviral prophylaxis - I don't think there's any controversy around this, particularly in patients on PIs and/or a CD38 mAb. We do use acyclovir even in patients who have received th...

What is your approach to antimicrobial prophylaxis in adult patients undergoing treatment for HLH?

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Infectious Disease · UT Southwestern School of Medicine

We often use bactrim for pneumocystis prophylaxis if high dose steroids are used and discuss the use of possible fluconazole for antifungal prophylaxis on a case by case basis. However, we do not have a specific protocol for these patients.