Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
Do you advise patients to hold DMARDs for conditions such as psoriasis or rheumatoid arthritis while actively undergoing radiation treatment?
Data in this setting is limited. I have usually not held DMARDs with RT unless treating with concurrent chemo RT or treating a site (pelvis) where myelosuppression caused by RT would further suppression immunity especially with biologics and methotrexate.
How do you approach anti-seizure medication management when it was started by another team for a seizure-naive patient before/after craniotomy for a tumor?
I would refer you to Dr. @Dr. First Last's answer to a similar question (https://www.themednet.org/question/15031) which beautifully summarizes data and guidelines. I usually counsel patients that everyone regardless of their medical history has a certain risk of seizure under physical stressors, th...
What are your management strategies for malignant pericardial effusion with a high risk of spontaneous hemorrhage, particularly in patients requiring anticoagulation for chronic atrial fibrillation?
We have many patients with malignant pericardial effusion who tolerate anticoagulation for DVT/PE/afib. In those patients, when AC is restarted (for example after pericardiocentesis), close monitoring with serial echo in a few days would be performed to see if effusion reaccumulates faster. Also, th...
Would elevated bone mineral density/T-score be enough to make a diagnosis of osteopetrosis?
You should not make the diagnosis of osteopetrosis based on a high bone density. There are several causes for high bone density including the autosomal recessive genetic disorder sclerostosis which is caused by mutations in the STOST gene which prevents the production of functional sclerostin.
What is your approach to monitoring the neurologic status of a patient with a traumatic brain injury requiring burst suppression for status epilepticus?
As with any other patient in status epilepticus requiring burst suppression, the neurological exam becomes limited to pupillary light reactivity. Pharmacotherapy used in the management of status epilepticus does not negate pupillary response. Not being able to obtain frequent neurological exams on a...
How do you manage insomnia in cancer patients that is refractory to traditional sleep aides?
Insomnia and other sleep disturbances are very common in individuals diagnosed with cancer, and it is often helpful for patients to hear this. A good history of other contributors to sleep disturbance can be helpful as well. Often, depression, anxiety, and pain, as well as other stimulant medication...
What is your approach to managing sclerosing mesenteritis (mesenteric panniculitis)?
I have seen and followed dozens of patients with this diagnosis. As noted above, it is important foremost to be sure of the diagnosis. Mesenteric panniculitis can be part of the IgG4 associated spectrum and so a biopsy is useful if it can be done safely. The other disease in the differential is carc...
What initial workup do you perform when there is a concern for porphyria?
This is a terrific question. But a broad question. Porphyria refers to a defect in heme biosynthesis leading to the accumulation of porphyrins and porphyrin precursors. We should remember that there are three general categories of porphyria based on clinical manifestations: acute hepatic porphyria (...
How do you use cardiac biomarkers, if at all, in prognostication for patients with ischemic stroke?
Has there been an observed interaction between ACE inhibitors and development of angioedema in a block demarcated superficial radiation therapy treatment volume (ex. lip)?
ACE inhibitors are the leading cause of drug-induced edema in the US (ACE inhibitor-induced angioedema - UpToDate). It was likely not related to the radiotherapy.