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

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Do you commonly observe acute erythrocytosis in patients with ILD flares being treated with supplemental oxygen and high-dose corticosteroids?

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1 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · University of California San Francisco

Assuming that this patient does not have erythrocytosis at baseline, my experience is that acute erythrocytosis is not typical. Erythrocytosis caused by hypoxemia typically has a lag of several weeks, even though EPO increases within 48 hours. You commonly see a moderate acute leukocytosis with high...

What is your clinical threshold for treating a potential monoclonal gammopathy of thrombotic significance?

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1 Answers

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Hematology · University of Wisconsin

I strongly advise against routine screening for monoclonal gammopathy in patients with thrombosis. The incidence of MGUS, particularly in older patients, is relatively high and so the signal-to-noise ratio in this setting will be very low. In a patient with recurrent thrombosis and thrombocytopenia ...

Do you routinely prescribe naloxone at discharge for patients with a known history of opioid use disorder?

2 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · Temple University Hospital

Yes. I routinely prescribe naloxone intranasal for patients with OUD. This is also routine in our Emergency Department and our Crisis Response Center. In our locality, patients can obtain naloxone from their pharmacy, free of charge. Naloxone, when available, can be used by bystanders or family memb...

How do you recommend incorporating B-lines on lung POCUS as part of evaluating a patient's volume status?

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1 Answers

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Hospital Medicine · Oregon Health and Science University

Great question! As you allude to in your question, it is important to address this problem holistically in the context of the patient's history, exam, labs, and other imaging. I find that this happens all of the time, and here is how I typically break them down when applying lung ultrasound. 1) 1-2 ...

How do you recommend incorporating B-lines on lung POCUS as part of evaluating a patient's volume status?

1
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Hospital Medicine · Oregon Health and Science University

Great question! As you allude to in your question, it is important to address this problem holistically in the context of the patient's history, exam, labs, and other imaging. I find that this happens all of the time, and here is how I typically break them down when applying lung ultrasound. 1) 1-2 ...

At what initial sodium level do you recommend strict avoidance of overcorrection (e.g., no more than 6 mEq/L in 24 hours) in patients with hyponatremia?

1 Answers

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Pulmonology · Phoenix Rising Medical Pc

Less than 120.

How do you counsel an otherwise healthy patient on how soon they can go back to moderate exercise after a bilateral pulmonary embolism?

1 Answers

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Hematology · Mayo Clinic

Generally, the approach is to have the patient start their exercise regimen at a lower intensity and gradually increase it based on their tolerance.

When pursuing complex PCI of the RCA (especially when lesion preparation is required), when do you consider placing a transvenous pacemaker in anticipation of conduction abnormalities?

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5 Answers

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Cardiology · Yale New Haven Health-Bridgeport Hospital

There are a few options when using roto for the RCA or a dominant LCX. Upfront TVP if you want to play it safe. Pretreatment with aminophylline 100-250 mg 10 minutes. Test run without pre-treatment and having atropine and/or TVP nearby at the ready. Which you choose depends on gut instinct and how...

Do you prefer a loading dose of 300mg or 600mg plavix for patients presenting with NSTEMI or unstable angina about to undergo LHC?

2 Answers

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Cardiology · Johns Hopkins University

Interesting question! As a rule of thumb, 600mg loads faster than 300mg. Therefore, it is more important when you anticipate your ballooning/stenting happening sooner rather than later (within minutes/hours). Per guidelines, Plavix is preferred over prasugrel/brilinta for stable angina (which was no...

What would be your advice to providers who are wary of QTc prolongation after starting an amiodarone load and wish to discontinue it?

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2 Answers

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Cardiology · NorthShore University HealthSystem

Amiodarone has been studied in patients with prior TDP patients and found to be safe (small paper from Mattioni et al., PMID 2774388 at Northwestern at the time of my EP fellowship). Amiodarone has been found to be more effective when it prolongs the QT, and the 500 mS limit does not apply to it as ...