Mednet Logo
HomePrimary Care
Primary Care

Primary Care

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

Recent Discussions

In a patient with well-controlled ulcerative colitis on tofacitinib for several years, would you consider switching to upadacitinib for a more favorable side effect profile?

2
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Gastroenterology · Northwestern Medicine

If it aint broke, dont fix it! No difference in AE profiles between tofa and upa.

In patients with an acute gout flare who have stage 3–4 CKD or are on anticoagulation, what is your preferred first-line treatment?

3
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · University of Kansas

This is a challenge. Intra-articular steroids may be the best option. Colchicine is an extremely complicated issue. A single dose of colchicine at 0.3 or 0.15 mg might be considered. Systemic steroids probably should be avoided because they reduce resistance to infection in an already compromised in...

How do you balance the risks and benefits of stimulant treatment in patients with poorly controlled hypertension?

6
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Psychiatry · University of Colorado

The short answer is that there are no clear cutoffs to clearly guide management, and often decisions are guided by shared decision making with patients and relevant specialties (psychiatry, primary care, cardiology).Clinical factors which may prompt you to stop or reduce stimulants: Elevated BP that...

What therapeutic approaches have you found effective for athletes with anorexia nervosa whose eating disorder symptoms are intertwined with sport-driven weight pressures?

1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Psychiatry · Oregon Health Sciences University

The gold standard for treatment of anorexia nervosa and all eating disorders is a team-based approach, including the individual, psychiatrist, counselor, primary care or sports medicine physician, dietician, appropriate family members, and, in the case of elite athletes, sometimes their coaches. Rap...

Do you taper memantine after completion of 24 weeks of therapy?

4
3 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Radiation Oncology · Mayo Clinic

Tapering is recommended when discontinuing some medications used in the management of dementia such as cholinesterase inhibitors. There are anecdotal cases of “discontinuation syndrome” after abrupt cessation of memantine in patients with dementia. However, this alone does not prove that a slow tape...

Should we be utilizing prophylactic G-CSF in our patients with intermediate risk of febrile neutropenia due to the COVID-19 pandemic?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Pediatric Hematology/Oncology · UMass Memorial Medical Center

There are many functions of G-CSF, including repression of T-cell and NK cell function. Unless you are certain that growth factors are not modifying the immune network to the detriment of viral clearance—there is no data that growth factors help clear viral infections.

What are the current official guidelines regarding managing patients during COVID-19?

2
3 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Radiation Oncology · Yale School of Medicine

Here are some guidelines and FAQ from professional societies: NCCN: https://www.nccn.org/covid-19/default.aspx ASTRO FAQ: https://www.astro.org/Daily-Practice/COVID-19-Recommendations-and-Information/COVID-19-FAQs ASCO Coronavirus Resources: https://www.asco.org/asco-coronavirus-information

What was the rationale for abrupt discontinuation of etanercept rather than gradual tapering in the SEAM-RA trial?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · University of Alabama

The main goal of this trial was to get RA patients off of therapy and to see whether they would flare or maintain remission. We didn’t expect that the ultimate likelihood of success or failure was going to be primarily related to how long it took to do that. While a gradual withdrawal of the drug ma...

When do you use a carbapenem empirically to treat a patient with Acinetobacter infection?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Infectious Disease · Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra / Northwell

Significant rates of Acinetobacter resistance to multiple classes of antimicrobial agents are a global concern. Mechanisms of resistance include bacterial production of beta-lactamases (i.e., carbapenemases), changes in porin channels, and alterations of target or cellular function due to mutations ...

For patients admitted while taking chronic outpatient opioids, how do you decide whether to resume their baseline opioid regimen at discharge versus tapering or modifying therapy during hospitalization?

1
5 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Hospital Medicine · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

I'm not sure there's a single right answer here. My only recommendation is for patients who are on chronic outpatient opiates: please talk to their ambulatory clinician before making any significant changes. Their ambulatory doctor knows them over time and can give you advice regarding what's happen...