July 31st, 2008 at 2:20 pm by Nick
Thanks to Bing, Dr. Okuda and Dr. Strother for a wonderful day of sim cases this week. Special thanks to all who had to tolerate my acting.
A few questions came up during the discussions, and, I’ve been trying to research with limited success.
The first question concerned antibiotics for heat illness. Certainly in ambiguous cases, where there is altered mental status with moderately high temperature, antibiotic coverage is mandated. But in our case, of the athlete on a hot day? It was asserted that the heat stress leads to gut flora dissemination, and antibiotics are warranted. But I could find no reference for this, and my usual sources are silent on the issue of prophylactic antibiotics.
The second question revolved around safety factors for emergent sedation. Specifically, I wondered if the risk of aspiration in emergent procedural sedation had been quantified in adults. It turns out there’s a lot of opinion on this matter, but not a lot of data. More below:
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Posted in Post-Conference Letter, Risk Stratification, Infectious Disease, Procedures, Blog | 1 Comment »
June 29th, 2008 at 12:17 pm by Nick
Hello everyone,
Thank you to those of you who passed up Ponte Vedra or new jobs to come to conference this week. Many thanks to our resident speakers, Matt, Shefali and Bing, and to our faculty presenters — Dr. Spina and Dr. Nassisi. Also thanks to the neurology department for their participation in our joint conference.
Below are some topics from conference that for which I found more resources, or that I just thought warranted repeating. Feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments section.
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Posted in Stroke / TIA, Post-Conference Letter, Risk Stratification, Useful Links, Sepsis, Infectious Disease, Blog | No Comments »
October 19th, 2007 at 9:22 am by Sohan
During our GU board review this week, I got to thinking about kidney stones and the frustrating stepwise approach to the patient with equivocal flank pain and a working diagnosis of nephrolithiasis. Most cases are easy since renal colic is common and presents so characteristically, but there are some patients with equivocal presentations. These patients with mushy histories, maybe some mild flank pain, maybe not, possible dysuria, and subjective fevers present diagnostic challenges. Is this an episode of renal colic, renal colic with obstruction and superinfection, pyelonephritis, or something else in the back or belly? This is when the first groan happens because the realization is the that the patient is possibly going to need 2 CT scans: one without IV contrast and then another one with. But maybe that’s not necessary because pyelo can be seen on a non-contrasted CT right? Something about fat stranding? Maybe we can just get away with the single scan, and if we don’t see the stone, we’ll find something to hang a weak diagnosis of pyelo on.
A quick review of nephrolithiasis. The most general approach to these patients is pain control followed by urinalysis. As was mentioned at conference, pain control is best achieved with combination therapy using an NSAID such as ketorolac and narcotic such as morphine (PMID: 16953530). If the clinical presentation is correct and urinalysis shows blood, imaging is not necessary. Here’s the first problem: the “classic” finding of hematuria can be absent up to 15% of the time (PMID: 7747369).
In cases which the diagnosis is not as clear, non-contrasted CT scan of the abdomen is indicated and proves to be a very good test for nearly all renal stones except for those secondary to HIV protease inhibitors such as indinavir (PMID: 9230000). So that’s great because unless we are dealing with that specific situation, the non-contrasted CT scan should certainly find the stone. But invariably that sometimes doesn’t happen, which brings up the second problem: what now?
At this point the arrow starts to point further down the differential and a diagnosis of pyelonephritis comes to mind given the patient’s bloody urine, positive leukocyte esterase, and mild flank tenderness. While pyelo is a clinical diagnosis supported by a characteristic urine, often muddled histories and unconvincing exams can leave the diagnosis in doubt. Non-contrasted CT scans can show an enlarged kidney or perinephric fat stranding indicative of a pyelo, but they can also be normal in the setting of pyelo. Thus in the patient with an unclear diagnosis based on urine and history and non-diagnostic CT scan, a contrasted CT scan should be pursued as the next step(PMID: 16937102, 15486235). Besides giving a much better image of the kidney in cases where the diagnosis is in doubt, a contrasted scan will highlight vascular diseases or renal infarcts whose presentations mimic that of renal colic and would not be seen on a non-contrasted scan. These are rare entities but can be missed easily. Bottom line: slog through getting 2 CT scans when kidney stones are not seen on the initial non-contrasted CT and the clinical picture is not a slam dunk for pyelo - the correct imaging for pyelo should be with IV contrast.
Posted in GU, Infectious Disease | 2 Comments »
March 18th, 2007 at 5:25 am by Nick
Jack tackled a controversial topic at this month’s Journal Club — what’s the evidence for giving antibiotics within four hours for CAP patients? It’s a good question, because how well we perform at this task is a big part of how our hospitals are measured. Ineed, pneumonia antibiotic timing is one of JCAHO’s Core Measures and there are only more such metrics down the road — so we’d like to think that our funding depends on rock-solid science and proven benefits.
Well…
As Jack noted, the 4-hr policy is based primarily on four papers,
1) Kahn et al, JAMA 1990 Oct 17 264(15) 1969-73 with comments 1995-6
2) McGarvey et al, Quality Review Bulletin April 13(4) 124-30
3) Meehan, Houck et al. JAMA 1997 Dec 17 278(23) 2080-4
4) Houck et al, Arch Intern Med. 2004; 164(6):637-644.
It’s this last paper we’re going to discuss — a retrospective study derived from a national sample of medicare patients with pneumonia.
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Posted in Pneumonia, Regulations, Infectious Disease, Journal Club | 3 Comments »