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Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.

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What workup is sufficient to determine if an aortic aneurysm is "mycotic/infectious" or not, in that you would not prescribe empiric antibiotic therapy?

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Infectious Disease · National Institutes of Health Clinical Center

It depends on your index of suspicion. If the clinical picture looks consistent with mycotic aneurysm, this is the one time where I have found karius testing to be helpful, particularly with nutritionally-variant strep species which can be tough to culture.

Do you recommend discontinuing IVIG for a newly diagnosed HMGCR+ statin induced necrotizing myopathy who developed a recent brachial DVT?

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Rheumatology · University of Pittsburgh

Really, the issue is if the DVT was provoked or not. If possibly not provoked then would decrease the dose of IVIG or give it over a long time frame. For example, if the patient is on 2 gm/kg over 2 days, I would do 2 gm/kg over 4 days. Or reduce the dose to 1 gm/kg over 2 days.

How do you counsel patients who experience diarrhea from mycophenolate mofetil (Cellcept)?

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Rheumatology · Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS)

I have them stop the drug, and when their bowels are back to normal (usually just a couple of days), I resume with 1 tablet bid of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF, CellCept), then a few days later go up to 1 tab tid, a few days later 2 tabs bid... etc. I instruct them to go down to the most recent dose ...

What additional workup would you recommend for a patient with a liver abscess caused by Fusobacterium and Aggregatibacter, who has had unrevealing endoscopies and no other abdominal masses on a CT scan?

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Infectious Disease · Beebe Infectious Disease

When I trained, we called it actinobacillus, now apparently aggregatibacter. Part of the HACEK group - causes of periodontitis and endocarditis. Fusobacterium I also with dental disease, oral infections and bacteremia. So my main interest would be the teeth, head/neck and endocarditis. In my populat...

How do you approach weakly positive PL-7 antibody in a patient who initially presented with muscle weakness, rhabdomyolysis and non specific muscular edema on MRI that resolved with IV fluids?

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Rheumatology · The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth)

During an episode of rhabdomyolysis, muscle MRI isn't reliable since it would be positive regardless of the underlying cause. So, monitoring the trajectory of CPK levels and serial muscle exams to evaluate for weakness would offer a more reliable assessment for true myositis. Positive antibody resul...

What are alternate approaches to medical therapy and/or interventions to consider in patients with refractory, severe coronary vasospasm despite short-acting nitrates, calcium channel blockers, L-arginine, and clonidine?

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Cardiology · ETSU Health Care

Angina caused by coronary vasospasm is relatively rare. I have come across very few cases of severe coronary vasospasm in my 15 years of career. The most common thread seems to be smoking and drug abuse (amphetamines, cocaine). Smoking cessation and stopping drug abuse are the most important interve...

Do you recommend thiamine for patients presenting with acute symptoms of TGA?

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Psychiatry · University of Washington

Thiamine might be considered, especially if the patient has features of Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. However, if the patient has TGA, no drug treatment is needed since the amnesia resolves on its own.

How do you approach management of ILD in the presence of weakly positive RF and ANA but no other objective systemic findings of connective tissue disease?

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Rheumatology · University of Washington

This issue comes up frequently in our combined ILD/Rheumatology clinic and my pulmonary colleagues are typically looking at me for an answer as to whether I think the biomarkers are relevant to the patient's ILD. Low-level ANAs and RFs are not uncommon in the general population and can result in ove...

What adjustments do you make to a hemodialysis prescription for a patient with a recent stroke?

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Nephrology · Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital

There are multiple considerations in the setting of a CVA in a patient requiring hemodialysis. One is addressing potentially high intracerebral pressure (ICP). A slow reduction in BUN to avoid osmotic-related brain cell swelling and an associated rise in ICP may be addressed in a variety of ways. Lo...

What are your management strategies for patients with end stage kidney disease on hemodialysis who develop hypercalcemia of immobility?

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Nephrology · University Of California San Francisco Medical Center At Parnassus

I have seen this situation from time to time. First, I would make sure the patient is not getting any calcium or vitamin D-containing products. Then would try to use a lower calcium bath. Unfortunately, many units are unable to lower the calcium bath below 2.0 mEq/L currently and a lot of time that ...