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

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How do you determine if pulmonary hypertension is disproportionate to the severity of lung disease?

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Pulmonology · Cleveland Clinic

This is a question we faced on a daily basis in our PH clinic. Patients with parenchymal lung disease like COPD or ILD would get an echocardiogram that showed an elevated RVSP and/or RV dilation/dysfunction and will be referred to our clinic for PH evaluation. Alternatively, the patient already unde...

Would you check ANCA titers in a patient with a history of PR-3-ANCA glomerulonephritis in remission and a stable creatinine but with recurrent microscopic hematuria?

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Nephrology · Ohio State Department Of Nephrology

Not sure there is an easy answer to this. A patient in remission should not get a recurrence of glomerular hematuria unless the disease is active. A new onset glomerular hematuria would certainly make me worried about a relapse, some of which may be subtle, indicating "grumbling disease". The data o...

If a patient has potential arrhythmic-sounding syncope and a noninducible type 2 or 3 Brugada ECG pattern, have we excluded Brugada syndrome as the etiology for their syncope?

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Cardiology · The Cleveland Clinic Foundation

This is a complex question with a few nuanced components. The first component is qualifying an arrhythmic versus non arrhythmic cause of syncope. I would stress that this is based on generalization as there are no features that will provide absolute certainty for the nature of a single syncopal even...

Is there any benefit in maintaining statin or aspirin therapy in patients >75 years old with stable, multivessel ischemic heart disease in light of challenges encountered with polypharmacy?

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Cardiology · Washington University School of Medicine

This is a great geriatric cardiology question because it acknowledges that guidelines may not apply in an older patient with multiple medical problems and a complex medication regimen. The question further implies that treatment should be individualized and patient-centered. I agree with the questio...

What is the stepwise investigation of patients suspected of inflammatory myopathy?

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Neurology · University of Minnesota

I have published an algorithmic approach to suspected inflammatory myopathy in Continuum Lifelong Learning in Neurology from AAN (Manousakis, PMID 36537973). Unfortunately, the article is not free, and I can't attach the algorithm in this response, because it's a PPT file. Happy to provide it upon r...

Would you recommend PFO closure in patients >60 years old with presumed paradoxical embolism as their mechanism of stroke?

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Neurology · Columbia University

Technically, based on the available clinical trial evidence, PFO closure is not indicated for patients over age 60 or for patients whose stroke was > 6 months ago. However, we frequently need to extrapolate from clinical trial populations to manage the patients we see in practice. Also, presumably, ...

What is the expected timeframe for the development of radiation myelitis and therapies that have helped with neurologic symptoms?

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Radiation Oncology · University of Arizona

The incidence and the timeframe of the development of radiation myelopathy are influenced by total radiation dose, radiation dose per fraction, time between courses of radiation, and associated chemotherapy or immunotherapy. Older age, the presence of diabetes, and previous exposure to radiation are...

How do you approach management of bone marrow involvement in sarcoidosis?

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Rheumatology · Emory Health

Monoclonal TNF inhibition would be an option as it is less likely to cause cytopenias and has shown some effectiveness in extrapulmonary Sarcoid. I have 2 patients who have anecdotally who have done well in the past.

Is it safe to continue azathioprine in a patient with severe bilateral panuveitis (thought to be related to sarcoidosis) and benign ethnic neutropenia, given worsening neutropenia since starting the medication, or should an alternative immunosuppressive agent be considered?

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Rheumatology · Virginia Commonwealth University Health System

In this case, I would consider stopping azathioprine and switching to an alternative medication, such as an anti-TNF agent. Although not a large drop in the PMN, azathioprine is known to cause leukopenia, and in a patient with known neutropenia, extra precaution should be taken. In the case of uveit...

How do you discuss harms of MGUS screening with other medical providers?

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Medical Oncology · University of Washington, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

I understand the intent of the question, but - as always - real life is more complicated. I agree that the evidence for screening completely healthy patients for MGUS does not currently exist. But, for patients with unexplained pertinent lab/imaging findings or symptoms, it's not unreasonable. In th...