• Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction (Diastolic CHF) and SGLT-2 Inhibitor Therapy
    Jan 27 2022

    The double-blind, randomized phase III EMPEROR-Preserved trial showed a benefit of the sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitor empagliflozin in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).

    Now let us dig a bit more into those headlines.

     

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    12 mins
  • Should You Postpone Interventions for INFECTED Necrotizing Pancreatitis?
    Oct 18 2021

    An important recently published randomized control trial provides guidance on this controversy.

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    10 mins
  • Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis - Unique Infections in Cirrhosis part 2
    18 mins
  • Unique Infectious Considerations in Cirrhosis - part 1
    8 mins
  • Diabetic Gastric Emptying Abnormalities (and sometimes normal) - Part 1
    May 9 2021

    Almost nobody feels comfortable managing DELAYED gastric emptying (gastroparesis) and very few medical providers even think about RAPID gastric emptying in their diabetic patients. Even if you send these patients to GI specialists, your blood sugar co-management of these patients can be heavily impacted by these issues. Is delayed gastric emptying always a bad thing? When your patient has upper GI symptoms, how often is it a gastric emptying abnormality? Time for some answers.

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    10 mins
  • Gastric Emptying Abnormalities - Part 2
    May 8 2021

    Can we trust a nuclear study to nail the diagnosis? Are motor abnormalities really the cause of symptoms? What is a POP procedure? 

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    10 mins
  • Morphine for later stage COPD patients not on hospice
    Apr 9 2021

    Does regular, low-dose, oral sustained-release morphine improve disease-specific health status or cause respiratory adverse effects in patients with moderate to very severe chronic breathlessness due to advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease? Digging in on the latest study.

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    9 mins
  • The JAMA controversy and loss of conversation in medicine
    Apr 5 2021

    My take on what went down at the Journal of the American Medical Association. I disagree with the comment there isn't "structural racism in health care", but was the backlash against the Editor who didn't say it (and actually opposed the comment) an over-reaction? Can we have discussions about the controversial issues that affect healthcare (like gun violence or abortion) without cancel culture cancelling the people who want to have nuanced discussions? I fear we lost the ability to have dialogue in a field where every MD/DO/PA/NP by definition has an advanced degree - and therefore we should be able to dispute misinformed statements to bring about change without the outrage going so far as to fire a person who actually objected to the hurtful statement. 

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    19 mins