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

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Do you routinely give prophylactic antibiotics prior to ERCP for biliary obstruction in light of recent studies suggesting a reduction of periprocedural infection?

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Hospital Medicine · UT Health San Antonio

I did not use to give antibiotics routinely prior to ERCP, and it seemed post-ERCP antibiotics were given at the discretion of the advanced endoscopist, but the results of this meta-analysis will likely change my practice so that I'll give all patients a dose of Ceftriaxone prior to the procedure to...

When can we consider deferring an insulin drip in patients with hypertriglyceridemia-induced pancreatitis?

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Hospital Medicine · Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

Serum triglyceride levels >500 mg/dL (5.6 mmol/L) are required for hypertriglyceridemia to be considered the underlying etiology of acute pancreatitis (UpToDate).For patients with severe hypertriglyceridemic pancreatitis, such as those serum triglyceride levels >1000 mg/dL plus lipase >3 times the u...

What interventions do you find helpful for the initial management of functional GI disorders in primary care?

1 Answers

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Gastroenterology · Southview Medical Group Pc

TCAs seem to help modulate pain, particularly at low doses.

How do you counsel patients with osteoporosis and cervical spine osteoarthritis who are considering chiropractic cervical manipulation or traction?

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Rheumatology · University of Kansas

I am concerned with the risks of actually causing a fracture or nerve impingement/damage. So, I would recommend against.

When do you use seizure prophylaxis in patients on clozapine?

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Psychiatry · University of Colorado

The topic of the use of anticonvulsants for primary prophylaxis of clozapine-induced seizures continues to be debated. The idea of prescribing anticonvulsants prophylactically for patients taking >600 mg/day of clozapine was suggested by Devinksy et al., PMID 2006003 in 1991. Clozapine-induced seizu...

What clinical tools and/or thresholds do you use to determine driving risk among older patients with mild cognitive impairment?

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Geriatric Medicine · David Geffen School of Medicine (UCLA)

I like to use the Clinical Assessment of Driver-Related Skills (CADReS). It reminds me to assess multiple domains, and reminds me which part of the MOCA is more pertinent to driving-related skills. If I have concerns, depending on the extent of my concern, I will either then file a concern with the ...

How do you decide when to use acid-suppressive medications for GI prophylaxis when patients are on prolonged corticosteroid therapy?

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Hospital Medicine · Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

We only use acid-suppressive medications for GI prophylaxis in patients treated with corticosteroids when they have additional risk factors for upper GI bleeding. Risk factors include concomitant NSAID or antiplatelet therapy, history of GI bleeding or peptic ulcer, age over 60 years, prednisone dos...

How do you decide when to use acid-suppressive medications for GI prophylaxis when patients are on prolonged corticosteroid therapy?

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3 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

We only use acid-suppressive medications for GI prophylaxis in patients treated with corticosteroids when they have additional risk factors for upper GI bleeding. Risk factors include concomitant NSAID or antiplatelet therapy, history of GI bleeding or peptic ulcer, age over 60 years, prednisone dos...

How do you decide between anticoagulation and observation for an incidentally detected subsegmental pulmonary embolism in elderly patients with a history of gastrointestinal bleeding?

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Pulmonology · Tufts Medical Center

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 do you consider starting short-term DAPT in patients who present more than 24 hours after the onset of a high-risk TIA or minor stroke syndrome?

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Neurology · Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Immediately. Unless tPA has been given, then at 24 hours.