Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
What is your approach to distinguishing a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction from a delayed anaphylactoid reaction?
As with most things in medicine, this is context-dependent. The Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction is a systemic inflammatory response to the death of bacteria (most commonly associated with spirochetes and in particular, syphilis), typically in the hours following antibiotic administration. This response ...
What is your approach to distinguishing a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction from a delayed anaphylactoid reaction?
As with most things in medicine, this is context-dependent. The Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction is a systemic inflammatory response to the death of bacteria (most commonly associated with spirochetes and in particular, syphilis), typically in the hours following antibiotic administration. This response ...
How would you approach treatment in a patient with refractory Coccidioidal meningitis who has previously been treated with IV amphotericin B?
The previous receipt of amphotericin B is irrelevant. Shortly after its introduction in the mid-1950s, it was recognized that it was ineffective in the treatment of coccidioidal meningitis when given intravenously and that intrathecal administration was necessary (Winn, PMID 14065439). The introduct...
What are some alternatives to dexamethasone for brain edema in patients who are allergic, have an intolerance, or refuse the medication?
Dexamethasone is one of the most frequently prescribed medications in neuro-oncology clinics. Dexamethasone is often favored over other corticosteroids owing to its lower mineralocorticoid effects and high potency as well as essentially 1:1 oral to IV ratio meaning that we use similar IV and oral do...
What is your preferred first line management of alcohol use disorder with concomitant depression?
The presence of comorbid depression doesn't significantly change the way I think about pharmacotherapy for AUD. I would still consider disulfiram, naltrexone (PO and IM), and acamprosate as equivalent first-line agents. It's worth noting that distinguishing between major depressive disorder and subs...
How do you approach screening for occult cardiac or tracheal involvement in a patient with relapsing polychondritis?
Hello! Dynamic CT and echo, if you have suspicion of vasculitis (physical exam, sx), a CTA can help. Happy to discuss your case.
What is the rationale/evidence to support doing 4 puffs of albuterol vs. 2 puffs for a reversibility study?
The rationale per ATS in 2005 is that 4 puffs of albuterol is higher on the dose-response curve and thus would potentially avoid getting a suboptimal (< 12%, < 200 mL) response from 2 puffs. Having said that, there was a study of this issue in 240 pediatric patients showing non-inferiority of 2 puff...
Would you initiate anti-arrhythmic drug therapy in patients who are asymptomatic and have normal LV function but with a PVC burden > 20 percent?
I overall agree with Dr. @Dr. First Last's approach. There are important considerations with high-burden PVCs beyond LVEF. The morphology can be helpful with regard is this consistent or atypical appearance of idiopathic PVCs. I will typically do an assessment for underlying structural heart disease...
With the growth of non-alcoholic beverages (e.g., NA beer, liquor, etc), how do you approach a patient's consumption of these products in the setting of alcohol related liver disease?
This is definitely a challenging conundrum to deal with. Historically, even the NA beverages would have 0.5% alcohol, so they weren't truly NA. With time, that has seemingly changed. Regardless, my approach is the same. I strongly advise against the idea that NA beverages are allowed. Mostly because...
What would be the clinical role of SGLT-2 inhibitors for lupus nephritis given it has an indication for proteinuria related to CKD?
The benefit for SGLT-2 inhibitors at slowing the progression of kidney disease or death from cardiovascular causes had been well established in patients with diabetic nephropathy. Further studies continued to demonstrate benefit in non-diabetic, proteinuric kidney disease (HR, 0.72 (95% CI, 0.64-0.8...