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

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Would you recommend starting an SGLT2 inhibitor in a proteinuric CKD patient with chronic asymptomatic bacteriuria?

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Nephrology · University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

In spite of the biological plausibility that SGLT2 inhibitors are associated with increased risk for UTI, population-based cohort studies, like the one of Dave et al in diabetic patients, did not show a higher risk of severe or minor UTI with SGLT2 inhibitor users and other antidiabetic drugs. The d...

How do you decide whether to include a basal rate when initiating a PCA?

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Hospital Medicine · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

This is a difficult question for which there is no good data to guide one's practice. The best book on this and other opiate questions is Mary Lynn McPherson's "Demystifying Opiate Conversion Calculations". I am relatively conservative on using continuous infusions (also called basal rates). My reas...

What is the interpretation of two IGRAs with negative mitogen wells, in the absence of immunosuppression?

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Infectious Disease · Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center

If I understand this case correctly, the patient is actively ill and the patient's doctors are considering tuberculosis as a possible etiology of the patient's illness. In that scenario, IGRAs and PPDs have a limited to no role. Epidemiology, family history, and other possible exposures do. In your ...

In which subset of patients with concussion do you recommend further brain imaging?

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Neurology · Hartford HealthCare

I recommend further imaging of a concussion patient in a subset of patients. If the patient had a seizure with the head injury or any sign of declining mentation within the first few hours, they should have a CT head emergently. If it is within 1 week from injury and they report steadily worsening e...

For patients presenting with ACS and severe aortic stenosis with critical left main disease, would you consider BAV prior to PCI to the left main?

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Cardiology · Interventional cardiologist

This sounds like a CABG AVR case on the surface; if inoperable or at prohibitive surgical risk, CHIP of the LNA lesion, followed by same setting or elective setting TAVR remains an option. CFA access with a large bore sheath (for CHIP/IABP or IMPELLA) will allow for an easy transition exchange for t...

How do you manage a patient with giant cell arteritis treated with weekly tocilizumab and low dose glucocorticoid who develops sudden vision loss?

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Rheumatology · Harvard Medical School

Fortunately, this scenario is a rare event, as most patients treated with ongoing tocilizumab (TCZ) and prednisone are at a far lower risk for developing new visual loss due to giant cell arteritis (GCA). A recent paper by Amsler et al., PMID 33752737 reviewing the risk for visual loss in patients b...

Do you recommend fluid restriction in addition to other management strategies for patients with hyponatremia due to SIADH?

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Nephrology · UCLA

Fluid restriction is the mainstay of therapy in patients with SIADH. To correct hyponatremia due to SIADH, electrolyte-free water intake must be less than urinary electrolyte-free water excretion assuming no significant non-renal fluid losses. The degree of fluid restriction may be lessened by the u...

How do you manage critically ill poor risk mixed germ cell tumor patients presenting de novo with extensive lung metastases and severe respiratory failure?

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Medical Oncology · Testicular Cancer Commons

A few things. I would make sure the patient gets early brain imaging. I usually talk to the patient and family obviously about the severity of the condition, but also that ICU/intubation/ECMO might be needed over the course of treatment 1. I usually take the 3-day EP approach stop and watch for abou...

Would you recommend switching to DAPT for patients on anticoagulation who develop symptoms of a TIA secondary to ICAD?

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Neurology · Shaare Zedek Medical Center

It is important to remember that there is more to stroke secondary prevention than antithrombotics. Our use of DAPT in ICAD comes from the SAMMPRIS trial, in which patients in the control group did better than expected compared to historical controls with ICAD in the WASID trial. Recall however, tha...

How do you manage catheter-associated, upper extremity superficial venous thrombosis?

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Hematology · Oregon Health & Science University

I manage catheter-associated upper extremity superficial venous thrombosis (SVT) conservatively with arm elevation, warm compresses, NSAIDs, and topical creams containing NSAIDs. Upper extremity SVT is primarily caused by indwelling intravenous catheters, so I do strongly recommend catheter removal ...