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

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For older adults undergoing intermediate-risk non-cardiac surgery, do you routinely check pre-operative pro-BNP levels for risk stratification based on emerging data and updated Canadian guidelines?

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Hospital Medicine · University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

Pre-operative NT-proBNP and BNP levels have been featured, not just in the cited Canadian guidelines but also in the 2024 update of the AHA/ACC preoperative evaluation guidelines. (Thompson et al., PMID 39316661). Those guidelines recommend evaluating a pre-op NT-proBNP level if the results will cha...

Should asymptomatic esophageal candidiasis identified incidentally on endoscopy be treated?

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Gastroenterology · University of South Florida

Yes, in our practice, we do treat asymptomatic esophageal candidiasis when found incidentally on endoscopy. A few things to consider: 1) While patients may be asymptomatic at the time of the endoscopy, untreated disease can lead to the future development of complications/symptoms, such as odynophagi...

What is your approach to perioperative risk stratification and optimization in patients with cirrhosis?

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Hospital Medicine · Temple University Hospital

The VOCAL-Penn score is one piece of information that I use for risk stratification in patients with cirrhosis. I usually treat symptomatic decompensated cirrhosis first (hepatic encephalopathy, ascites, hepatic hydrothorax, hepatorenal syndrome, variceal bleeding), because the risk scores usually c...

How do you approach managing perioperative anxiety in Mohs patients?

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Dermatology · University of Iowa

Great question. Music, stress balls, having your team engage in conversations with the patient, and other distraction techniques are helpful. Some patients may need medications such as Halcion to help with anxiety but this should be given after the patient signs consent and has a verified driver aft...

How do you approach the choice of pharmacological therapy when treating insomnia in older adults in the outpatient setting with a high falling risk?

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Geriatric Medicine · Yale University

My approach is to first see if there are non-pharmacologic options to help with sleep - are there behavioral factors to target (e.g., caffeine or alcohol use; inappropriate sleep scheduling or daytime napping), medications that could disrupt sleep-wake schedules, or untreated sleep or mood disorders...

What is your approach to treating hypercalcemia secondary to immobilization?

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Endocrinology · Boston University School of Medicine

My first approach is to have the patient become mobile if at all possible, even just increasing mobility in bed by doing leg and arm exercises, which can help, and getting up and walking is preferable if at all possible. Physical therapy is also helpful. I would make sure that the patient is well hy...

What is your calcium level threshold for initiating targeted calcium lowering therapies for patients with an acute kidney injury believed secondary to renal vasoconstriction and volume depletion?

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Nephrology · UCLA

Treatment of hypercalcemia should be based on the severity of the symptoms rather than any arbitrary calcium level threshold. Therefore, if the AKI is due to hypercalcemia-induced renal vasoconstriction and volume depletion, then the hypercalcemia should be treated.

What is your approach to treating hypercalcemia secondary to immobilization?

1
1 Answers

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Endocrinology · Boston University School of Medicine

My first approach is to have the patient become mobile if at all possible, even just increasing mobility in bed by doing leg and arm exercises, which can help, and getting up and walking is preferable if at all possible. Physical therapy is also helpful. I would make sure that the patient is well hy...

Do you recommend checking anti-drug antibodies for patients on TNF inhibitors?

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Rheumatology · NYU Grossman School of Medicine

This is a very good question with direct clinical practice implications. I do not check or follow anti-drug antibodies when using TNF inhibitors for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. There are reports that suggest, on a group level, that these antibodies, if present, impa...

How do you determine which atrial fibrillation patients with a high thromboembolic risk and a contraindication for oral anticoagulation should undergo left atrial appendage occlusion?

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Cardiology · Lankenau Heart Group

If the contraindication is absolute, all high risk patients need to be informed about the availability of LAAO devices. If the patient cannot take an anticoagulant or antiplatelet for a short period after implant, an epicardial approach could be considered.