Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
What are your thoughts on trending beta-hydroxybutyrate once a diagnosis of DKA is already established?
Beta-hydroxybutyrate (BOHB) ≥3.0 mmol/L is highly sensitive and specific for diagnosing DKA and can be measured through serum or point-of-care testing. However, its role in monitoring treatment response and determining resolution remains debated. The American Diabetes Association recommends continui...
When do you consider changing a patient's levothyroxine dose during hospitalization due to abnormal TFTs, but without clinical evidence of thyrotoxicosis or hypothyroidism?
Thank you for your question. I think this is something we commonly get in the hospital, and we often overreact to it. This was a "Things We Do For No Reason" some time back, and I think they outline the issues well.When people are acutely ill, TSH testing is unreliable. The times when TSH testing is...
How do you decide when to initiate antibiotics for superimposed bacterial pneumonia in patients with influenza?
Antibiotic therapy should not be routinely prescribed for patients with influenza and should instead be reserved for those with a specific clinical concern for secondary bacterial pneumonia. This diagnosis is best identified by clinical trajectory. Key triggers include initial improvement followed b...
How do you decide when to initiate antibiotics for superimposed bacterial pneumonia in patients with influenza?
Antibiotic therapy should not be routinely prescribed for patients with influenza and should instead be reserved for those with a specific clinical concern for secondary bacterial pneumonia. This diagnosis is best identified by clinical trajectory. Key triggers include initial improvement followed b...
Do you screen for interstitial lung disease in patients with newly diagnosed polymyositis or dermatomyositis in the absence of respiratory symptoms?
I do screen all newly diagnosed IIM patients with PFTs and chest CT. This has a double purpose: establishing a baseline of lung function and, screening for lung cancer. While the patient might not have lung symptoms on presentation, respiratory involvement can manifest later on the course of the d...
What are your preferred treatment options for patients with chronic non-healing leg ulcers?
In addition to all the typical things (decreasing edema with meds, compression, etc + treating superinfection, critical colonization, or debriding eschars), there is some evidence for pentoxifylline 400 mg TID or 800 BID in ulcerations of any etiology. There is also newer evidence for using topical ...
How do you consider the clinical relevance of elevated serum B12 levels as a marker of underlying hepatic disease?
Elevated B12 levels have shown significant relevance and significance to many underlying conditions, particularly a high correlation with underlying liver disease. About 1 in 5 to 1 in 4 B12 levels >1000 pg/ml had a significant correlation. It is a prognosticator, in my opinion, and the literature s...
How do you consider the clinical relevance of elevated serum B12 levels as a marker of underlying hepatic disease?
Elevated B12 levels have shown significant relevance and significance to many underlying conditions, particularly a high correlation with underlying liver disease. About 1 in 5 to 1 in 4 B12 levels >1000 pg/ml had a significant correlation. It is a prognosticator, in my opinion, and the literature s...
How do you approach balancing the risks and benefits of elective surgery with patients who have multiple co-morbidities (e.g., frailty, chronic kidney disease, and COPD), when standard risk calculators do not capture the full complexity of their condition?
This is definitely a concern, and tools/calculators can only take us so far. I have come across scenarios where, the e.g., pulmonary respiratory failure calculator provided a low score, and based on the history, I thought the patient was at high risk. A few weeks later, before the surgery, the patie...
How do you approach balancing the risks and benefits of elective surgery with patients who have multiple co-morbidities (e.g., frailty, chronic kidney disease, and COPD), when standard risk calculators do not capture the full complexity of their condition?
This is definitely a concern, and tools/calculators can only take us so far. I have come across scenarios where, the e.g., pulmonary respiratory failure calculator provided a low score, and based on the history, I thought the patient was at high risk. A few weeks later, before the surgery, the patie...