Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
What is the role for checking uric acid levels in evaluation of SIADH in hospitalized older adults?
Uric acid is typically not a first-line test for evaluation of hyponatremia. It's usually used when trying to differentiate between hypovolemic states (not SIADH by definition) and euvolemic states (including SIADH). The utility stems from how uric acid is handled in the nephron, i.e., it's reabsorb...
What is the role for checking uric acid levels in evaluation of SIADH in hospitalized older adults?
Uric acid is typically not a first-line test for evaluation of hyponatremia. It's usually used when trying to differentiate between hypovolemic states (not SIADH by definition) and euvolemic states (including SIADH). The utility stems from how uric acid is handled in the nephron, i.e., it's reabsorb...
Would you recommend anticoagulation prophylaxis for a pediatric patient admitted with COVID-19?
COVID-19 disease in children seems to be less severe than adults based on the current literature and our personal experience at Children's Hospitals. Among adults, the coagulopathy is beginning to be described with elevated inflammatory markers and other markers of coagulation activation, including ...
Would you biopsy calcified lung nodules and or lymphadenopathy that have shown stability over a 2-year period, in a bid to rule out sarcoidosis?
No. Certainly not without a comprehensive occupational and other exposure history. Follow "the rules" for the assessment of any sarcoidosis suspect. Do a physical exam to look for extrapulmonary signs of sarcoidosis. Order an eye exam to assess for ocular sarcoidosis. Obtain baseline MTB testing and...
Would you consider empiric anticoagulation in patients with an acute stroke for whom you have high suspicion for cardioembolic source, but have not yet confirmed LV thrombus, atrial fibrillation, etc.?
In practice, I would rarely consider empiric anticoagulation after an acute ischemic stroke without a confirmed cardioembolic source. I would not consider this approach for suspected LV thrombus, as transthoracic echocardiography is routinely available in the inpatient setting and can quickly confir...
Based on most current research regarding the more widespread use of class IC antiarrhythmic drugs, what are your prescribing practices in patients with coronary artery disease?
Fair question, as we know the definition of "structural heart disease" is unknown. In the trial, it was likely ischemia driving the poor outcomes, so I will get stress with imaging on everyone >50 years old (CAD risk). Given the common finding of "questionable" stent placement in the community, I wi...
In what situations would you recommend metformin in addition to aggressive lifestyle interventions for patients with prediabetes and obesity?
So based on studies such as the Diabetes Prevention Program and newer meta-analyses such as Comparison of the Efficacy of Metformin and Lifestyle Modification for the Primary Prevention of Type 2 Diabetes: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials (Vajje et al., PMID 38021728). Lifestyle modif...
How would you approach management of retroperitoneal fibrosis causing ureteral compression that has already caused irreversible loss of kidney function?
I agree with my colleagues and will add some additional thoughts. While I agree that tissue diagnosis is helpful whenever it can be obtained (both to differentiate IgG4-related vs idiopathic RPF and to exclude other causes such as lymphoma, sarcoma, and Erdheim-Chester Disease), it is often the case...
In patients with persistent borderline hypotension recovering from sepsis or critical illness, do you use midodrine to avoid escalating to higher levels of care?
Although midodrine is a medication that can be used to avoid vasopressors, I think it is much more important to give isotonic fluids when the patient would benefit from fluids. It is also very important to determine the etiology of hypotension. Is hypotension related to sepsis? Hypovolemia? Bleeding...
How would you manage a patient who presents with hair loss that began after they started a GLP-1 inhibitor?
If it fits with telogen effluvium, I recommend monitoring. Many patients will improve after this initial shedding and will not have long-term shedding or long-term thinning. If there is any underlying androgenetic alopecia or pattern hair loss, then starting treatment as you normally would is also r...