Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
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 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?
Immediately. Unless tPA has been given, then at 24 hours.
How do you evaluate and manage acute alcohol withdrawal when symptom-driven protocols are confounded/unreliable?
I developed a structured, objective approach centered on PAWSS risk stratification and standardized mMINDS plus RASS monitoring rather than relying solely on symptom-driven tools like CIWA. At intake, patients with suspected alcohol use disorder undergo PAWSS assessment, baseline mMINDS scoring, RAS...
Do you typically give GI prophylaxis when providing patients with steroid taper for status migrainosus?
I usually do a 3-6 day taper with prednisone, dexamethasone, or medrol dose pack for status migrainous. Occasionally, I have done a 12-day taper if the status migrainous is prolonged. I have not used GI prophylaxis.
What are some tips for visual estimation of ejection fraction when trying to difference between low-normal (50-55%) and mildly reduced (45-50%)?
Differentiating between a low-normal (50–55%) and a mildly reduced (45–50%) ejection fraction (EF) is inherently difficult with visual estimation alone because the difference is subtle. When evaluating point-of-care ultrasound, it is important to consider the limitations of the device you are using....
Do you use MRSA nares PCR to influence antibiotic selection for non-respiratory infections?
BLUF: Yes, I use a MRSA nares PCR for early de-escalation in the stable patient with a non-purulent, non-respiratory infection. Mergenhagen et al., PMID 31573026 retrospectively examined nearly half a million clinical cultures and compared them to MRSA nares results. Among all infections, the NPVs w...
How do you approach osteoporosis screening in men?
While osteoporosis is more prevalent in postmenopausal women, it is often under-recognized in men. The risk of mortality after hip fracture is higher in men, and that risk may extend over 10 years after injury. Men who sustain a wrist fracture are more likely to have severe osteoporosis and a higher...
How do you decide when to implement a "renal diet" (i.e., restricting electrolyte and/or fluid intake) in hospitalized patients with renal impairment?
I think about this from several perspectives: First, what's the severity of the renal impairment? Generally, I consider electrolyte abnormalities like hyperkalemia and hyperphosphatemia more likely to occur when the eGFR is <60 (for hyperphosphatemia, it might be more evident when the eGFR drops bel...
How do you decide when to treat hypocalcemia in hospitalized patients?
When I think about when to treat hypocalcemia in hospitalized patients, I anchor the decision on three things: symptoms, the absolute calcium level, and the trajectory. First, it’s important to confirm true hypocalcemia: either a serum calcium <8 mg/dL or an ionized calcium <1.1 mmol/L, and to consi...
When do you consider extended steroid tapers for acute asthma or COPD exacerbations?
The data doesn't support extended tapers - 5 days of 40 pred equivalent are non-inferior, and extended courses can cause harm, including increases in mortality. I only use extended tapers for patients who have, in the past have rapid symptom recrudescence with the typical shorter course. Typically, ...