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Physician perspectives on preventive care, chronic disease management, and evidence-based primary care practice.

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Do you prefer monitoring creatinine over cystatin C levels in patients with lymphoma and chronic kidney disease given the potential for cystatin C levels to be increased with certain malignancies?

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Nephrology · Yale

My default is to monitor creatinine, not cystatin C, in all patients with malignancies except: if patients have had weight loss and down-trending creatinine, patients are at eGFR cutoffs for chemotherapy drug dosing, leading to concern for potential over/under-dosing, there is concern for pseudo-AKI...

Do you recommend stopping a SGLT2i indefinitely if a patient with chronic kidney disease and diabetes develops euglycemic diabetic ketoacidosis?

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Nephrology · University Of California San Francisco Medical Center At Parnassus

I would. In my opinion, the risk of ketoacidosis will outweigh the possible benefit from SGLTs.

Do you recommend dietary protein restriction in your patients with chronic kidney disease?

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Nephrology · University Of California San Francisco Medical Center At Parnassus

Not really. I let the serum BUN be the guide. If the serum BUN is very high and otherwise patient does not need dialysis then it may be helpful to decrease the protein intake. This is more often observed in inpatients (with some degree of AKI) than outpatients.

Can joint replacement surgery be performed in someone with active Paget’s disease elsewhere?

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Endocrinology · Providence John Wayne Cancer Institute Endocrinology

Joint replacement surgery can be done in patients with Paget's disease. There should be no problem particularly if the patient has been treated to suppress disease activity. The best treatment is a 5 mg intravenous infusion of Recast which can suppress disease activity for 5 years or more.

What else do you consider in the differential diagnosis for pulmonary-renal syndromes if there is low clinical and serologic evidence of AAV, Goodpasture's or other rheumatologic disease (SLE, RA, APS, Scleroderma)?

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Nephrology · Rush Medical College

Endocarditis can mimic vasculitis and can have pulmonary hemorrhage. You CANNOT miss that one. Sarcoidosis is I suppose a pulmonary renal syndrome. Renal vein thrombosis from MGN with a pulmonary embolus is I suppose a pulmonary-renal syndrome.

How do you counsel newly diagnosed patients with ALS on dietary recommendations?

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Neurology · University of Minnesota

I counsel all my newly diagnosed ALS patients about the importance of weight maintenance. Weight loss is an established risk factor for accelerated ALS progression according to several studies (Janse van Mantgem et al., PMID 32576612 and Jawaid et al., PMID 20500116). Therefore, we always aim to mai...

Do you routinely perform genetic testing in patients presenting with pulmonary fibrosis who endorse a family history of fibrotic lung disease?

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Pulmonology · Cleveland Clinic

I receive this question frequently when I hear from other clinicians and I think it is a very thought-provoking question. We know that patients with pulmonary fibrosis (PF) commonly have first-degree relatives with interstitial lung disease (ILD). Some studies quote numbers as high as 20% so it is d...

How would you manage patients with exposed bone due to injured gingiva after recent chemoradiation?

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Radiation Oncology · University of Florida

Pentoxifylline and vitamin E

How would you approach additional workup and management of a patient with active Crohn’s disease, who has multiple lung and brain nodules, with lung pathology demonstrating necrotizing granulomatous inflammation and brain biopsy with granulomatous inflammation and medium-large vessel vasculitis?

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Rheumatology · Massachusetts General Hospital

This is a great question and a challenging case. Further workup would depend on the clinical presentation and the risk factors of this particular patient, however, I will outline some broad considerations centered around questions I would consider in a similar case. Has Crohn's disease been definit...

How do you approach treating mild hypercalcemia in patients with sarcoidosis?

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Rheumatology · Hospital for Special Surgery/Weill Cornell Medicine

This may seem like a straightforward query, but like many issues surrounding sarcoidosis, it is actually deceptively complex. For a more complete discussion, I refer the readers to an excellent review by Lower and Saidenberg-Kermanac’h (2019). In and of itself, asymptomatic “mild” hypercalcemia does...