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Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.

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Is intracranial hemorrhage a contraindication for valproic acid?

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Neurology · UC Davis Health

The short answer is no. Valproic Acid (VPA) can cause bone marrow suppression leading to thrombocytopenia, as well has hypofibrinogenemia. Through these mechanisms, and possibly others, platelet aggregation is reduced, which may place one at risk for hemorrhagic expansion, but in my experience, and ...

Can TPO agonists, like avatrombopag or lusutrombopag, be used for patients with chronic thrombocytopenia and new acute portal vein thrombosis?

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Hematology · University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry

A caveat before answering - these tend to be very difficult clinical situations in a population that often has cirrhosis and has a very difficult-to-predict hemostatic picture (whether they are prohemorrhagic or prothrombotic from the underlying liver disease).I would refer you to some of the excell...

How do you approach inpatient DVT prophylaxis in patients already on low dose rivaroxaban 2.5 mg BID for PAD?

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Hematology · Oregon Health & Science University

I suspect that the approach to this situation may vary by provider given the lack of definitive evidence. ASH 2018 guidelines provide recommendations for inpatient thromboprophylaxis in acutely or critically ill patients. Generally, prophylactic LMWH is recommended over DOACs, but guidelines acknowl...

How would you decide between conservative management vs. ILR or pacemaker for asymptomatic nocturnal bradycardia/pauses (as an example rates in the 30s, pauses ranging 4-12 seconds) in the absence of bradyarrhythmias during the day and ECG with normal intervals, and not otherwise on medications to slow down HR?

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Cardiology · Optum Medical Care, NY

The guidelines are clear in stating that patients with symptomatic bradycardia or higher degree heart block during waking hours would benefit from pacing, but determining symptom-rhythm correlation is not always easy. In sinus node dysfunction, there is no established minimal HR or length of pause t...

Is there a risk of increased skin toxicity with combined radiation and doxycycline?

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Radiation Oncology · Tennessee Oncology

No reports that I am aware of. Tetracyclines have an absorption wavelength of ~300-350 nm and can be pushed into an excited energy state by primarily UVA (320-400 nm) waves. Relaxation back to base state leads to chemical reactions that generate photoproducts that serve as antigens in a cutaneous al...

When do you consider lumbar spinal fluid drainage after acute spinal cord injury?

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Neurology · University of Minnesota

Extremely rarely indicated.

Do you refer all patients with new findings of CNS or epidural mets/tumor to ED for evaluation or are there some that can be managed completely outpatient?

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Radiation Oncology · UNC School of Medicine

Interesting question: Sending patients to the ED for non-emergent conditions is not advised. Our EDs around the country are struggling for a variety of reasons (e.g., they are often holding patients awaiting placement or admission), thus our society will benefit by us avoiding sending patients to t...

What is your approach to managing osteoporosis in patients with end stage kidney disease?

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Nephrology · U Chicago

I don't believe you can make a diagnosis of osteoporosis in patients with ESRD. They have to be treated based on the disorders associated with CKD-MBD and not solely based on the results of a bone density scan. In some patients with documented low turnover disease and mineralization defect, some may...

Would you consider DHE for patients with status migrainous with elevated blood pressure at the time of presentation?

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Neurology · Greater Boston Headache Center at Boston Advanced Medicine

No, I would not. DHE is a very potent and non-selective arterial vasoconstrictor and would potentially further increase elevated blood pressure. When a patient who presents with a headache is found to have elevated blood pressure, it should be assumed that the elevated blood pressure is the cause of...

Would you expect cinacalcet to lower calcium levels in a patient with Familial Hypocalciuric Hypercalcemia (FHH)?

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Endocrinology · Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

The hypercalcemia in FHH is not primarily driven by overactive PTH secretion, so targeting the CaSR pharmacologically would not address the underlying pathophysiology. However, I suppose inducing hypoparathyroidism with Cinacalcet would induce calciuria, though at the expense of hypocalcemia.