Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
How do you counsel patients on the risks and benefits of antidepressant use during pregnancy?
I always frame the decision as being between the risks and benefits of the medication vs. the underlying condition. We are always aiming for the "minimum effective dose" but "effective" is just as important as "minimum." Medications are, of course, not the only way to treat psychiatric illness and a...
How do you evaluate and manage incidental urinary retention in hospitalized patients?
Another great question. First, we need to confirm the presence of urinary retention (>300 ml on postvoid residual [PVR] bladder scan is considered clinically significant to continue evaluating for common reversible causes, such as medications, structural abnormalities, presence of constipation, feca...
How do you evaluate and manage incidental urinary retention in hospitalized patients?
Another great question. First, we need to confirm the presence of urinary retention (>300 ml on postvoid residual [PVR] bladder scan is considered clinically significant to continue evaluating for common reversible causes, such as medications, structural abnormalities, presence of constipation, feca...
Do you routinely check N-telopeptide levels in patients who you suspect might have immobilization induced hypercalcemia?
No, I do not check N-telopeptide level in patients with suspected immobilization-induced hypercalcemia. Although N-telopeptide is a sensitive marker of bone resorption, elevated N-telopeptide is not specific to immobilization-induced hypercalcemia and can be elevated in other clinical conditions cha...
What is your preferred first-line regimen to treat a severe or fulminant C difficile infection?
IV vancomycin and PO Flagyl are the easiest combination to get for a hospitalized patient. I’ve had much experience with this, and it works very well. IV vancomycin and PO Flagyl as initial treatments in the hospital is my preference. This is before I go onto stronger drugs, with those requiring al...
In adults ≥80 years with TSH 6–10 mIU/L and minimal symptoms, do you initiate levothyroxine, monitor, or avoid treatment entirely?
I tend to check free T4 in this situation. Aging is associated with some elevation in TSH value up to 10 mIU/L with normal free T4, and in those patients, levothyroxine is not needed. In some patients, I have seen it rise above 10 with normal free T4. Supplementing levothyroxine to lower serum TSH w...
What is your preferred laboratory test to assess treatment response or infection resolution in patients with bacterial pneumonia?
I don't generally check a laboratory test to assess resolution. I go more by their improved clinical status and seeing them get back to baseline oxygen status. If I am trending a WBC or procal, I do like to see it trend down, but it's not the only lab I hang my hat on to decide if someone has resolv...
What is your preferred laboratory test to assess treatment response or infection resolution in patients with bacterial pneumonia?
I don't generally check a laboratory test to assess resolution. I go more by their improved clinical status and seeing them get back to baseline oxygen status. If I am trending a WBC or procal, I do like to see it trend down, but it's not the only lab I hang my hat on to decide if someone has resolv...
What adjunctive therapies to you recommend for symptom control in acute opioid withdrawal beyond full/partial opioid agonists?
Here are some general recommendations below. I recommend asking the patient what symptoms are most bothersome or what they anticipate to be the most bothersome when prescribing adjuncts. I routinely recommend APAP/ibuprofen, and then usually prescribe something for anxiety and nausea. Tizanidine can...
Do 5HT4 agonists such as Metoclopramide actually lead to improvement in symptoms for patients with diabetes related gastroparesis?
Yes, sometimes when the gastroparesis is frequent or the symptoms are tough, I do use Reglan to help. By the time they wind up in the hospital, they are really willing to have me use anything on them that might help. I explain to every patient the side effects of Reglan, including tartive dyskinesia...