Mednet Logo
HomeHospital Medicine
Hospital Medicine

Hospital Medicine

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

Recent Discussions

How do you decide on supportive care vs empiric antibiotics in a patient with suspected aspiration pneumonitis (i.e., witnessed macroaspiration event within the past 24 hours) but with features that could suggest pneumonia (e.g., acute respiratory distress, fever, leukocytosis, pulmonary infiltrates, etc.)?

2
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Hospital Medicine · University of Colorado

Great question and one that comes up all the time for me. As the patient has more signs of true infection, such as those you mention with fever, leukocytosis, and respiratory distress, I am much more likely to start antibiotics. If the patient just has chest radiograph findings of opacities and some...

How do you decide on supportive care vs empiric antibiotics in a patient with suspected aspiration pneumonitis (i.e., witnessed macroaspiration event within the past 24 hours) but with features that could suggest pneumonia (e.g., acute respiratory distress, fever, leukocytosis, pulmonary infiltrates, etc.)?

2
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Hospital Medicine · University of Colorado

Great question and one that comes up all the time for me. As the patient has more signs of true infection, such as those you mention with fever, leukocytosis, and respiratory distress, I am much more likely to start antibiotics. If the patient just has chest radiograph findings of opacities and some...

How would you approach the upfront management of a patient with acute unilateral vision loss with strong clinical risk factors for both cardioembolic stroke and GCA if an expedited MRI is not possible due to the presence of an AICD?

3
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
General Internal Medicine · University of California, San Francisco

I'm definitely not an expert in this topic, but you have many clinical tools to increase/decrease your clinical suspicion for GCA vs. cardioembolic stroke. Some things I would ask: Is this patient currently in Afib? What's their CHADSVASC? Are they anticoagulated? Can we get a TTE to check for vege...

How would you approach the upfront management of a patient with acute unilateral vision loss with strong clinical risk factors for both cardioembolic stroke and GCA if an expedited MRI is not possible due to the presence of an AICD?

3
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
General Internal Medicine · University of California, San Francisco

I'm definitely not an expert in this topic, but you have many clinical tools to increase/decrease your clinical suspicion for GCA vs. cardioembolic stroke. Some things I would ask: Is this patient currently in Afib? What's their CHADSVASC? Are they anticoagulated? Can we get a TTE to check for vege...

In the absence of clear guidelines, when would be a reasonable threshold to refer patients with resistant hypertension for renal denervation?

1
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Nephrology · UAB Medicine

Recommendations surrounding renal denervation have now been added to the AHA 2025 guidelines.

What type of DES should you opt for if a patient has or is concerned about possible nickel allergy?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Cardiology · Unitypoint

For a coronary stent, I would lean toward a Medtronic DES. There are published recommendations for nitinol with a durable polymer. That said, I cannot remember more than one case in 25 years where I thought that a metal allergy may have played a role in a patient receiving a stent and that was prior...

How do you typically manage a patient with a single positive blood culture from two sets growing Candida species in a stable patient without prosthetic devices or material?

1
5 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Infectious Disease · Emory University Hospital

Candidemia is defined as the presence of Candida species in the blood, and even a single positive blood culture specimen is considered significant and warrants treatment as candidemia. Initial management should include: Initiating antifungal therapy with an echinochandin (micafungin, capsofungin, o...

What are the best practices for optimizing transitions from hospital to skilled nursing facilities for older adult patients, with specific regard to adapting hospital medication regimens to the skilled nursing facility setting?

1
3 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Geriatric Medicine · VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System

Medication errors and discrepancies are well known to lead to adverse drug events during transitions of care, as well as rehospitalization. The standard of care that has emerged over the last twenty years or so is rigorous medication reconciliation. Medication reconciliation is defined as comparing ...

What are the best practices for optimizing transitions from hospital to skilled nursing facilities for older adult patients, with specific regard to adapting hospital medication regimens to the skilled nursing facility setting?

1
3 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Geriatric Medicine · VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System

Medication errors and discrepancies are well known to lead to adverse drug events during transitions of care, as well as rehospitalization. The standard of care that has emerged over the last twenty years or so is rigorous medication reconciliation. Medication reconciliation is defined as comparing ...

How do you approach managing clozapine in patients who are critically ill?

1
1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Psychiatry · Harvard Medical School

With COVID-19 disproportionately affecting those with mental illness we found an increasing number of medical admissions for those on clozapine. There are multiple domains of concern for those on clozapine who are medically ill. Clozapine levels have been shown to potentially double during periods o...