Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
What specific criteria or patient conditions would make you hesitant to use fluoroquinolones early in the treatment course for managing MSSA joint infections with oral antibiotics?
For MSSA joint infections, I have moved away from using FQ to using high-dose cephalosporins as a step-down therapy, particularly cefadroxil 1 g twice daily, given less frequent dosing/increased adherence. Considering the risk-benefit analysis, I prefer using FQ as an oral option in polymicrobial an...
How do you counsel your patients with diabetes that tighter glycemic control could be harmful as they age when they've been committed to a goal A1c% <7.0-7.5 for many years?
I counsel my elderly patients and their families that at a certain age, the risk of developing long-term sequela of diabetes (eye disease, kidney disease) becomes lower because those things take many years to develop. However, elderly people are more vulnerable to medication side effects, so we adju...
What is your approach to anticoagulation in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and an apical aneurysm?
Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and an apical aneurysm are at higher risk for sudden cardiac death (hence the 2a guideline recommendation for primary prevention ICD) and thromboembolism. Rowin et al., PMID 29122139 previously noted that non-anticoagulated HCM patients with apical aneurysms...
How do you recommend counseling patients on the prognosis of advanced cancer as a generalist who is not highly specialized in cancer literature or cancer-directed therapies?
Generalists can accurately prognosticate on the order of days to short months without specialized knowledge when caring for people with advanced cancer because the prognosis is often clinically obvious, and because most cancer-directed therapies take weeks to months to work (a patient may not live l...
How do you select an SSRI and dosing strategy for older adults newly being treated for depression?
SSRIs are preferred based on tolerability, drug interaction potential, and comorbidities. Start at low doses (e.g., sertraline 25 mg daily) and titrate gradually to therapeutic levels over 1–2 weeks, monitoring closely for adverse effects. Among SSRIs, sertraline and escitalopram are particularly r...
Do you favor aggressive airway clearance regimens or bronchoscopy for clearing occluding mucous plugs in patients who are not in respiratory distress?
The first step is to determine the cause of the secretion issue. Is this acute or chronic? The underlying disorder that predisposes to abnormal mucus or ineffective cough? How much difficulty is this creating with ventilation and or oxygenation (ir level of urgency?). Since there is no respiratory d...
For patients with acute renal failure and possible urinary retention, do you obtain a bedside bladder POCUS exam before ordering renal imaging or placing a Foley catheter?
Bedside Bladder Ultrasound has a strong role in the evaluation of acute urinary retention (AUR) as a possible cause for acute renal failure. Practice varies, as does the evidence base, but most POCUS experts recommend ultrasounding both the bladder (to assess for post-void residual volume) and both ...
For patients with acute renal failure and possible urinary retention, do you obtain a bedside bladder POCUS exam before ordering renal imaging or placing a Foley catheter?
Bedside Bladder Ultrasound has a strong role in the evaluation of acute urinary retention (AUR) as a possible cause for acute renal failure. Practice varies, as does the evidence base, but most POCUS experts recommend ultrasounding both the bladder (to assess for post-void residual volume) and both ...
Do you integrate firearm violence prevention into your annual wellness visits?
What is your approach to initiating spironolactone in patients with end stage kidney disease and heart failure?
Not sure that we have a consensus answer for this question, but spironolactone in hemodialysis patients likely causes more harm than good.There are data suggesting that spironolactone increases the risk for arrhythmia (heart block or bradycardia; Mc Causland et al., PMID 36763641) and hyperkalemia (...