Primary Care
Physician perspectives on preventive care, chronic disease management, and evidence-based primary care practice.
Recent Discussions
How would you manage an elderly patient with type 3 achalasia who previously underwent POEM and has recurrent dysphagia, high Eckardt score, and dilated esophagus concerning for blown-out myotomy on esophagram?
This is a complex clinical scenario which requires a multi-disciplinary approach at an expert center. One of the main goals is to decipher why the patient is still having symptoms. Is the patient is having symptoms due to persistent achalasia or due to the blown out myotomy. You can make this distin...
Do you ever delay starting levodopa in patients with Parkinson's disease?
With LEAP and the 5-year follow-up study, we can feel comfortable deciding to start patients early on levodopa to maximize quality of life via motor symptom control. In this study, there were no differences in UPDRS scores, the prevalence of wearing off, or levodopa equivalent daily dose between the...
Is there any utility to trending Histoplasma serology titers to guide duration of therapy or treatment response for pulmonary histoplasmosis with negative urine antigen?
Serology unfortunately is not useful to monitor response to therapy as the fall in titers is often very slow. In immunocompetent individuals, titers will often take a few years to show a significant drop in the antibody titer after successful treatment. The treatment duration should be guided by the...
Does a low serofast RPR titer (such as 1:1 or 1:2) in the setting of a remote history of appropriately treated latent syphilis in a patient with now uveitis of yet unknown etiology referred from ophthalmology for possible ocular syphilis make a diagnosis of ocular syphilis less likely?
I err on the side of offering empiric treatment. As syphilis rates have risen over the past 20 years, so has the incidence of syphilitic uveitis (Mir et al., PMID 37991790), and the question posed, therefore, represents a not uncommonly encountered conundrum for infectious disease consultants. Syphi...
What would be your approach to a patient with new diagnosis of seropositive rheumatoid arthritis manifesting as a constrictive pericarditis with no joint pain complaints?
This is an interesting clinical scenario. It highlights some of the current issues we face as rheumatologists, namely an atypical presentation of one of our more common diseases. This patient is labeled as having seropositive rheumatoid arthritis yet lacks arthritis features. I suspect the diagnosis...
Is there a role to continue aspirin in patients with myeloproliferative disorders who have never had a thrombotic event that are starting DOAC for stroke prophylaxis with newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation?
Aside from treating erythromelalgia, transient ischemic attacks (TIA) such as ocular migraine or documented atherosclerotic disease, aspirin has no role in the management of the MPN, despite the widely published recommendations for its use, particularly in so-called "high risk" polycythemia vera (PV...
Would you avoid combining JAK inhibitors with IVIG given the risk of thromboembolism?
The evidence for this is not very clear and limited. I think a honest discussion about the risk of JAKs and IVIG with the patient will be the most important; but as long as there is no clotting history or high risk of DVTs/PEs, and this is documented, and if a patient needs both medications to attai...
When would you treat mild anemia from low testosterone in an older male?
The primary indication for testosterone treatment is symptomatic hypogonadism and not anemia. Given the risk for adverse events in terms of erythrocytosis, cardiovascular events, and potential prostate diseases, the risk of providing testosterone for asymptomatic, mild anemia outweighs its benefits,...
How do you manage neurocognitive decline associated with chemotherapy (i.e. chemo brain)?
I agree with @Dr. First Last's detailed response. Practically speaking, I would also add that it is important to listen and validate your patient's concerns and respond to their frustration and sense of loss. A diagnostic evaluation will not only help you and your patient discover or 'rule out' othe...
Is there any contraindication to the use of ezetimibe in patients with a history of statin-induced necrotizing myopathy?
These types of questions are always great to discuss. The reality is there is a risk-benefit ratio to be considered. On one hand, there is a concern for the need for lipid-lowering to prevent cardiovascular disease, and some situations are more pressing than others. A diabetic with a known cardiovas...