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

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How do you manage perioperative anticoagulation for a patient with a history of recent, surgically provoked VTE?

1 Answers

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Hematology · Medical University of South Carolina

In most cases, bridging is rarely indicated because the bleeding risk usually outweighs the risk of VTE recurrence during a short (1–2 day) interruption of anticoagulation. However, after a recent VTE (defined as <3 months), the estimated risk of VTE recurrence is high (>15–20% per year) (still low ...

What would be your second pressor of choice if patients with LVOT obstruction remain persistently hypotensive on phenylephrine?

1 Answers

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Cardiology · University of Nebraska Medical Center

In patients with LVOT obstruction who remain hypotensive despite treatment with phenylephrine, choosing an appropriate second pressor requires careful consideration of the hemodynamic goals and the specific pharmacologic properties of available agents. Here are a few points: While the specific liter...

What is your treatment algorithm for management of retroperitoneal fibrosis that does not respond to high-dose glucocorticoids?

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1 Answers

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Rheumatology · MUSC Health

There are a number of caveats to this. Is the retroperitoneal fibrosis biopsy-proven and/or IgG4 disease ruled out? If a case is refractory, I first question whether the diagnosis is correct and will often biopsy in this situation with more than an FNA biopsy. The second question is how long have t...

What techniques do you find most helpful to optimize image acquisition for cardiac POCUS in patients with poor acoustic windows?

1 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · NYU Grossman School of Medicine

For the parasternal windows, your enemies are ribs and lungs. Regarding ribs: Whenever an image gets dark, people tend to try and crank up the gain knob to compensate. In many cases, however, it's usually because one of the edges of the probe is abutting a rib. Try and slide the probe a few millimet...

What techniques do you find most helpful to optimize image acquisition for cardiac POCUS in patients with poor acoustic windows?

1 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · NYU Grossman School of Medicine

For the parasternal windows, your enemies are ribs and lungs. Regarding ribs: Whenever an image gets dark, people tend to try and crank up the gain knob to compensate. In many cases, however, it's usually because one of the edges of the probe is abutting a rib. Try and slide the probe a few millimet...

When would you phlebotomize patients with secondary hemochromatosis, such as due to NAFLD/cirrhosis?

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1 Answers

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Hematology · Weill Cornell Medical College and Houston Methodist Hospital

My simple answer is “rarely, if ever” (but it can get much more complicated). Related to hepcidin changes, patients with chronic liver disease frequently have elevated serum ferritin and transferrin saturation, more so with alcoholic liver disease and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. It is far fro...

How do you counsel patients with depression about the role exercise may play in alleviating depressive symptoms?

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7 Answers

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Psychiatry · Private Practice

I’m a big fan of exercise for all of my patients, to the point where I have my 5th-degree black belt diploma on the wall of my office next to my undergrad, PhD, and MD diplomas. I tell patients, “That’s up there to say to try and fit in exercise as realistically as your schedule allows, in a way you...

When an older adult with multiple comorbidities develops a new, significant functional decline after a hospitalization, how do you decide whether to pursue further diagnostic workup versus accept it as post-hospitalization deconditioning and focus on rehabilitation?

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Geriatric Medicine · Brown University

I try to characterize the nature of the functional decline in a descriptive sense - what has become difficult and why, what are the patient and caregivers experiencing? I think through a differential diagnosis for that, and then I look at the totality of diagnosed problems from the hospitalization a...

When an older adult with multiple comorbidities develops a new, significant functional decline after a hospitalization, how do you decide whether to pursue further diagnostic workup versus accept it as post-hospitalization deconditioning and focus on rehabilitation?

1 Answers

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Geriatric Medicine · Brown University

I try to characterize the nature of the functional decline in a descriptive sense - what has become difficult and why, what are the patient and caregivers experiencing? I think through a differential diagnosis for that, and then I look at the totality of diagnosed problems from the hospitalization a...

Would you continue or stop anticoagulation for a DVT/PE in a patient with active cancer who has completed 6 months of therapy?

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3 Answers

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General Internal Medicine · University of California, San Francisco

This is an important question that we didn’t really have a clear answer for… until this year when an NEJM RCT was published! Mahé et al., PMID 40162636 In this RCT, patients with cancer-associated VTE who completed 6 months of full-dose apixaban were randomized to half-dose apixaban vs. full-dos...