Primary Care
Physician perspectives on preventive care, chronic disease management, and evidence-based primary care practice.
Recent Discussions
Do you continue to check tryptase levels in your patients with idiopathic anaphylaxis despite normal levels >5 on repeated checks?
Baseline serum tryptase levels have been reported to be quite stable in the vast majority of patients, but can vary more in people with HaT or mastocytosis. With a bST <8 ng/ml, there is no obvious reason to continue to check it. However, even with normal bST, the Practice Parameters recommend furth...
How do you handle hypogammaglobulinemia detected in patients prior to maintenance rituximab infusion?
That is a good question. Adding on to Dr. @Dr. First Last's response, rituximab has been shown to cause hypogammaglobulinemia that can persist or worsen with ongoing therapy. In a study published by Barmettler and colleagues, 133 patients out of a cohort of 8633 patients had serum IgG levels checked...
How would you manage active severe psoriasis in a patient planning pregnancy, who also has psoriatic arthritis with well-controlled joint symptoms on certolizumab pegol (anti-TNF therapy)?
If the psoriasis was sufficiently limited in area that topicals were a practical solution, I'd first try to assure that the prescribed topical steroids were being used well. Poor adherence is a common issue with topical treatment. Phototherapy might be my next choice. I feel comfortable prescribing ...
Under what circumstances would you hold an ACE inhibitor or ARB prior to surgery in a patient with CKD?
I suppose if it was a high risk for hypotension or fluid shift, I may hold it. I'd rather be a bit hypertensive than under-perfused. If they are being used for reno protection, getting off them for a short period will have no influence.
What is your medication of choice when considering outpatient alcohol withdrawal management (diazepam vs chlordiazepoxide vs lorazepam)?
While benzodiazepines such as chlordiazepoxide, diazepam, and lorazepam remain the mainstay of treatment for acute alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS), their use in the outpatient setting is generally inappropriate for patients with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)—except in narrowly defined, low-risk scena...
What is your medication of choice when considering outpatient alcohol withdrawal management (diazepam vs chlordiazepoxide vs lorazepam)?
While benzodiazepines such as chlordiazepoxide, diazepam, and lorazepam remain the mainstay of treatment for acute alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS), their use in the outpatient setting is generally inappropriate for patients with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)—except in narrowly defined, low-risk scena...
Do all patients initiating omalizumab need to have it administered in a healthcare setting?
In the trials, all cases of anaphylaxis were on first administration--suggesting it is not intrinsic to drug and is more likely because you are giving it to a group of people who may be more susceptible to anaphylaxis in general. FDA has cleared at home use, so my general approach in a patient witho...
How do you assess and counsel women with chronic post-lumpectomy or mastectomy pain?
Post-surgical breast pain is not uncommon. Estimates suggest that 25-60% of patients having breast surgery experience persistent pain, with symptoms lasting from months to years following breast cancer diagnosis and treatment (Langford et al., PMID 25439318; Gartner et al., PMID 19903919).Initial as...
How do you assess and counsel women with chronic post-lumpectomy or mastectomy pain?
Post-surgical breast pain is not uncommon. Estimates suggest that 25-60% of patients having breast surgery experience persistent pain, with symptoms lasting from months to years following breast cancer diagnosis and treatment (Langford et al., PMID 25439318; Gartner et al., PMID 19903919).Initial as...
How do you manage anticoagulation/antiplatelet therapies with strong indications for uninterrupted therapy in setting of urgent procedures?
If anticoagulation is absolutely contraindicated because of the bleeding risk of the procedure, then "bridging" will usually make the most sense, most of the time, with low molecular weight heparin such as enoxaparin. If dual antiplatelet agents are contraindicated, particularly in the first month a...