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Navigating the path of contradictory medical opinions

Ralph Gordon, MD
Conditions
August 24, 2011

With the advancement in healthcare and technology we are able to greatly extend the life expectancy of the population. For the healthcare provider that means that more elderly patients and patients with multiple chronic medical conditions are being admitted to the hospital. Some “complex” patients require a multidisciplinary approach with the involvement of multiple consultants.

As a primary attending physician for the patient you often have to deal with contradictory …

Read more…

Navigating the path of contradictory medical opinions

Pain control in a patient with rib fractures and a spinal cord transsection

Ralph Gordon, MD
Physician
June 1, 2011

When I was called to see the patient after a motorcycle accident I expected the worst. The patient sustained a thoracic spine injury with cord transsection at T5 level as well as significant chest wall injury on the right side.

Multiple ribs were broken; some with a significant displacement. Managing patients with a significant chest wall trauma could be a nightmare. Pain control is only one of the challenges.

Read more…

Pain control in a patient with rib fractures and a spinal cord transsection

Do Not Resuscitate and the need for a central line

Ralph Gordon, MD
Physician
March 15, 2011

Just the other day I was called to see a patient coming up to the Intensive Care Unit with a diagnosis of pneumonia. Upon my arrival the patient is “hanging in there” with the blood pressure in the 60’ and 70’s systolic.

This is a no-brainer situation – the patient is in sepsis and septic shock.

Early intravenous antibiotics and aggressive resuscitation is what this gentleman needs right now. Per the ER …

Read more…

Do Not Resuscitate and the need for a central line

Intubating the combative patient

Ralph Gordon, MD
Conditions
January 11, 2011

How many times have I been asked by the trauma surgeons to see a trauma patient for respiratory failure? The reason for intubation and ventilatory support – being combative and non-cooperative.

Intubating, sedating and sometimes even paralyzing a combative patient is an established practice. Combative patients are dangerous to themselves and to the medical staff. Clinical and radiological evaluation of these patients is difficult as well. Asking “What is hurting, Sir” …

Read more…

Intubating the combative patient

Neoplastic epidural spinal cord compression is an oncologic emergency

Ralph Gordon, MD
Conditions
November 15, 2010

There are very few oncologic emergencies. Neoplastic epidural spinal cord compression is one of them. The delay in diagnosis and treatment is often explained by the non-specific nature of the presenting signs and symptoms.

The patient developed urinary retention a couple of weeks prior to presentation. On the morning of admission he was fully functional. Later he sat down to have a cup of coffee and boom – he couldn’t feel …

Read more…

Neoplastic epidural spinal cord compression is an oncologic emergency

Keeping the terminal patient comfortable is the purpose of comfort care

Ralph Gordon, MD
Patient
September 28, 2010

Dealing with an incurable illness or terminal condition is an inevitable reality of the practice of medicine. Not uncommonly, especially in the intensive care unit, we care for the patient with no chance for recovery and survival. Keeping that patient comfortable and allowing him or her to die with dignity becomes the priority of care.

Occasionally, I hear requests from the family members of the dying patient – “Can you give …

Read more…

Keeping the terminal patient comfortable is the purpose of comfort care

Applying the minimally invasive concept to patient management

Ralph Gordon, MD
Patient
August 24, 2010

Every time you subject the patient to an invasive procedure you take the risk of causing complication. I have done hundreds if not thousands of procedures which makes me even more aware of the risk I take every time I stick a needle or cut into the patient. We can do everything possible to enhance the safety, yet we cannot completely eradicate the risk of adverse events.

With the recent progress …

Read more…

Applying the minimally invasive concept to patient management

Good medicine sometimes makes patients unhappy

Ralph Gordon, MD
Physician
July 24, 2010

As physicians, we all strive to practice good medicine. Good medicine means evidence based medicine in the patient’s best interests. In the ideal world this will make patients happy and satisfied. If you are getting the best treatment for your condition you should be happy, right?

In the real world, though, keeping patients or their families’ happy and practicing good medicine might not be possible at the same time. This is …

Read more…

Good medicine sometimes makes patients unhappy

Obese patients present challenges in the ICU

Ralph Gordon, MD
Physician
June 25, 2010

Obesity is a huge healthcare problem in the United States.

It has reached the proportions of an epidemic and continues to get worse. Multiple medical problems including heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, sleep apnea and cancer are closely associated with obesity. The patients with extreme obesity can reach a body weight of five, six or seven hundred pounds and even higher. Riddled with chronic medical conditions, these patients often end up in …

Read more…

Obese patients present challenges in the ICU

Patients who attempt suicide and withdrawal of medical care

Ralph Gordon, MD
Conditions
June 2, 2010

If a person tries to commit suicide, could that be considered as a statement that this person wishes to die and does not want aggressive treatment to save his or her life?

Not from a legal standpoint, and not if you are living in the United States.

A middle-aged man with a long standing history of depression decides to end his life. He puts a large caliber gun straight to his forehead …

Read more…

Patients who attempt suicide and withdrawal of medical care

Declining autopsy rate, and how that impacts doctors

Ralph Gordon, MD
Conditions
May 12, 2010

The role of autopsy in the medical profession is difficult to overestimate. Western medicine takes its roots from comparative studies between patient’s symptoms and the findings on autopsy.

Participation in an autopsy was one of the most valuable lessons from medical school and residency. If you participated in the patient’s care, there is no greater educational tool than witnessing the postmortem exam. It is especially true if the cause of death …

Read more…

Declining autopsy rate, and how that impacts doctors

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  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
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      Jay Pendyala | Education
    • The controversy over Maintenance of Certification for grandfathered physicians

      Bernard Leo Remakus, MD | Physician
    • When side effects are actually a cry for help with medication costs

      Shuchita Gupta, MD | Physician
    • The hidden math behind physician hiring costs and recruitment

      Timothy Lesaca, MD | Physician
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      Ronald L. Lindsay, MD | Conditions
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      Corina Fratila, MD | Physician
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      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
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      Ivy Oandasan, MD | Policy
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      Brian Hudes, MD | Physician
  • Recent Posts

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      Seleipiri Akobo, MD, MPH, MBA | Physician
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