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

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How many days prior to surgery do you recommend stopping SGLT2 inhibitors and when is it safe to resume therapy?

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Endocrinology · Brigham And Womens Hospital Endocrinology

SGLT2-inhibitors have been known to precipitate episodes of diabetic ketoacidosis(DKA) with glucose levels far lower than are usually seen in DKA. This has been called euglycemic DKA. SGLT-2 inhibitors cause an increase in the glucagon to insulin ratio, which promotes ketosis, as well as fluid loss ...

What strategies do you find helpful in advanced care planning with patients/families who are very "miracle" centered?

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Geriatric Medicine · Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Hope for the miracle yourself! Broaden: “Are there any other things you are hoping for?” Hope for the best, prepare for the worst: “I see how much you want a miracle. I wonder if we can talk about what we should do if this doesn’t happen.” Consider involving a religious leader if relevant.

What strategies do you find helpful in advanced care planning with patients/families who are very "miracle" centered?

5
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Geriatric Medicine · Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Hope for the miracle yourself! Broaden: “Are there any other things you are hoping for?” Hope for the best, prepare for the worst: “I see how much you want a miracle. I wonder if we can talk about what we should do if this doesn’t happen.” Consider involving a religious leader if relevant.

At what point would you consider stopping antidepressant treatment of late life depression after remission?

1 Answers

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Geriatric Medicine · Oregon Health & Science University

My first step here would be to answer some clarifying questions: What is the patient's current prognosis? (If the patient has a limited life expectancy- weeks to small order months- then I would certainly consider deprescribing with more ease.) Are there any foreseeable anticipated triggers for depr...

Which patients with mild cognitive impairment do you consider referring for amyloid-targeted therapy?

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Geriatric Medicine · Wake Forest University School of Medicine

This is an important question, as clearly, not everyone with MCI is appropriate or interested in Amyloid-Targeted Therapy. In general, I would say that the TRAILBLAZER-ALZ 2 trial did not change my approach to patient selection much, but it did provide more evidence that this class of drugs has a pl...

How should you manage a COVID-19 infected/suspected patient who is receiving chemotherapy and cannot interrupt or delay their cancer treatment?

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Medical Oncology · Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

This is difficult to answer specifically without further details. There certainly is accumulating evidence that patients with cancer, especially those receiving immunosuppressive chemotherapy, are at greater risk of COVID-19 infection if exposed, and a greater risk of serious and life-threatening co...

Is your approach to managing immune related adverse events altered at all in light of COVID-19?

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Medical Oncology · Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center

First of all, I wish to thank @Dr. First Last from Johns Hopkins/Sibley for his advice addressing this critical topic.We are all witnessing a rapidly evolving crisis that none of us have been prepared for and it is the right thing to quickly consider as best as we can how the COVID-19 pandemic shoul...

How do you approach management of new onset ILD in a patient with RA who is otherwise well controlled on methotrexate or leflunomide?

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Rheumatology · University of Washington

We do not have any randomized controlled trials for DMARDs in RA-ILD. Most of the data is case series or retrospective analysis. Nonetheless, we can use current data to at least make clinical decisions until we receive more direction from high-quality clinical trials. We now know that in general met...

How do you present the trade off between a small chance of a sustained response for a new drug at the expense of potential worsening quality of life?

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Medical Oncology · Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Since we now have an increasing number of treatments at our disposal, this becomes an ever more frequent conversation in oncology. This question gets at several Shared Decision Making (SDM) model steps. Usually in this scenario, there are not routine standard of care options and highlighting the pat...

How to approach reversal of TNK in hemorrhagic conversion of ischemic stroke?

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Neurology · University of Calgary

There is no specific "reversal agent" for tenecteplase. Once administered, the thrombolytic effect will persist until the drug is fully metabolized and any residual plasmin has been cleared by alpha-2-antiplasmin. So, perhaps the first question is what can you do if there is an acute bleeding event ...