Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
For patients with acute renal failure and possible urinary retention, do you obtain a bedside bladder POCUS exam before ordering renal imaging or placing a Foley catheter?
Bedside Bladder Ultrasound has a strong role in the evaluation of acute urinary retention (AUR) as a possible cause for acute renal failure. Practice varies, as does the evidence base, but most POCUS experts recommend ultrasounding both the bladder (to assess for post-void residual volume) and both ...
For patients with acute renal failure and possible urinary retention, do you obtain a bedside bladder POCUS exam before ordering renal imaging or placing a Foley catheter?
Bedside Bladder Ultrasound has a strong role in the evaluation of acute urinary retention (AUR) as a possible cause for acute renal failure. Practice varies, as does the evidence base, but most POCUS experts recommend ultrasounding both the bladder (to assess for post-void residual volume) and both ...
Do you integrate firearm violence prevention into your annual wellness visits?
What is your approach to initiating spironolactone in patients with end stage kidney disease and heart failure?
Not sure that we have a consensus answer for this question, but spironolactone in hemodialysis patients likely causes more harm than good.There are data suggesting that spironolactone increases the risk for arrhythmia (heart block or bradycardia; Mc Causland et al., PMID 36763641) and hyperkalemia (...
Do you recommend providing supplemental oxygen for patients with a pneumothorax in the absence of hypoxemia?
I was certainly always taught that one should give supplemental oxygen to patients to decrease the size of the pneumothorax. This is based on the "nitrogen wash-out" theory, essentially, you're trying to get the partial pressure of nitrogen down in the alveoli so that it will be resorbed from the pn...
How do you weigh the risk of urinary catheter or fecal management system placement with that of soiling sacral wounds?
This question is an important question that arises for many of our bed-bound and poorly mobile patients, as sacral wounds commonly develop due to pressure injury. They become very challenging to treat due to fecal and urinary contamination, which can lead to further infection. Fecal and urinary dive...
How do you decide when to implement a "renal diet" (i.e., restricting electrolyte and/or fluid intake) in hospitalized patients with renal impairment?
I think about this from several perspectives: First, what's the severity of the renal impairment? Generally, I consider electrolyte abnormalities like hyperkalemia and hyperphosphatemia more likely to occur when the eGFR is <60 (for hyperphosphatemia, it might be more evident when the eGFR drops bel...
What factors should be considered when deciding whether to omit radiation in pediatric/AYA patients receiving N+AVD, particularly regarding long-term outcomes and second malignancy risks?
Based on the early data from S1826, it appears that radiation can be omitted if end-of-therapy scans (after 6 cycles of therapy) show metabolic remission of disease. The ability to limit RT to 1% of patients is encouraging for potential reduction in late effects such as cardiovascular disease and SM...
In patients with confirmed hypercortisolism with a high/normal unsuppressed ACTH who have both a pituitary adenoma and adrenal adenoma identified on imaging, can you reliably use DHEA-S to determine the source of cortisol production?
There is a difference between high-normal and unsuppressed ACTH. If ACTH is high-normal, this is ACTH-dependent Cushing. However, you can have mild adrenal Cushing without fully suppressed ACTH (e.g., ACTH in the 10-20 pg/ml range and sometimes even above 20). I don't think you can rely on DHEAS in ...
How do you approach managing intolerable vivid dreams as a side effect of SSRIs?
Given that the dreams are described as intolerable, I would transition to an agent more favorable in terms of sleep architecture, such as vilazodone (Viibryd).