Primary Care
Physician perspectives on preventive care, chronic disease management, and evidence-based primary care practice.
Recent Discussions
How do you approach the significance of +RNP III antibody in a patient with positive ANA but no other signs or symptoms of systemic sclerosis?
RNA polymerase III is a specific autoantibody for a subset of systemic sclerosis associated with severe diffuse cutaneous scleroderma, renal crisis, GAVE, and a strong association with malignancy. If this antibody is identified in the absence of Raynaud's or other symptoms of scleroderma, its signif...
How do you approach the treatment of Crohn's colitis in the setting of immunosuppression for liver transplant?
Good question, as additional immune suppression can increase the risk of infection. The anti-rejection drug mycophenolate can cause diarrhea, which could mimic a Crohn’s flare. I individualize Crohn’s therapy in a liver transplant patient. What type of Crohn’s do they have? What meds were they on pr...
How would you manage and determine the duration of antibiotics for a patient with suspected chronic postoperative spinal implant infection, status post lumbar fusion, now presenting with loosened hardware on imaging, normal inflammatory markers, and no systemic infection symptoms?
Loosening can be identified as lucency around pedicle screws on standard radiography, commonly at the upper or lower ends of the surgical construct. It was graded on a scale of 0-3. High-grade loosening (grade 2 or 3) is associated with increased odds of requiring revision surgery. It can be mechani...
Do you recommend avoiding radial artery access for cardiac catheterization to preserve potential future dialysis access sites in patients with advanced CKD?
With Radial arterial catheterization ( RA-CA), structural damage to the artery manifests as intimal tears and medial dissection along the length of the vessel. Further, even though 2-30% of the arteries will thrombose, about 50% of these will recanalize at 1 month. In spite of this, endothelial func...
Is there a role for functional medicine approaches in psychiatric treatment?
Functional medicine is a pretty broad term that encompasses stressors underlying biological, hormonal, nutritional, and environmental impacts on a person’s health. While I am a big fan of trying to get to the root causes of health conditions, including mental health conditions, and think in terms of...
What practical next steps would you recommend once identifying loneliness in an older adult patient?
First, normalize and validate the experience, emphasizing that it is common and appreciating that the patient is willing to discuss this with you. Explaining that they can and deserve to feel better may help set the stage for the conversation. Listen with genuine attention. Clarify the type of lonel...
What practical next steps would you recommend once identifying loneliness in an older adult patient?
First, normalize and validate the experience, emphasizing that it is common and appreciating that the patient is willing to discuss this with you. Explaining that they can and deserve to feel better may help set the stage for the conversation. Listen with genuine attention. Clarify the type of lonel...
Do you routinely recommend a lumbar puncture for patients with suspected ocular or otic syphilis in the absence of additional CNS symptoms?
No, this isn’t necessary, assuming no other evidence of non-ocular/otic neurosyphilis. I recommend management as advised by CDC in the 2021 treatment guidelines (https://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment-guidelines/STI-Guidelines-2021.pdf, p. 40). An especially careful neurological exam is advised, includin...
What surveillance do you recommend for a patient with locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma who had a complete clinical response to total neoadjuvant therapy and declines to undergo surgery?
It is important to watch these patients closely since ~15-20% will have local regrowth/recurrence that are salvageable (Dossa et al Lancet 2017). The OPRA trial, recently presented at ASCO 2020, included 324 patients treated with TNT regimens and WW if complete response. Organ preservation rates wer...
How do you decide whether to place an NGT or PEG tube in patients with dysphagia precluding adequate PO nutritional intake?
There are several factors that go into the decision of PEG tube vs continued nutrition via a nasogastric feeding tube(NGT). Anticipated time to recovery of oral pharyngial function (especially in the most common underlying illness, which is stroke). NGT can stay in place for up to 2 months without...