2024 The potential impact of computed tomography coronary calcium score screening on patients with dyslipidemia
Coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring helps determine whether patients with known coronary artery disease (CAD) should initiate medical management by predicting future cardiac event risk. CAC scoring is underutilized because many insurance companies consider it experimental. This study aims to determine whether CAC screening of patients at risk for CAD can decrease the risk of myocardial infarction and improve survival.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
2024 Management dilemmas in restarting anticoagulation after gastrointestinal bleeding
Systemic anticoagulants are widely prescribed to prevent and treat thromboembolism, among other indications. A common com-plication of using these agents is gastrointestinal bleeding. While early resumption of anticoagulants after the bleeding has resolved can increase the risk of rebleeding, delayed resumption puts the patient at increased risk of thromboembolic events and mortality. There is limited data on this topic to guide clinicians on resuming anticoagulation after hospitalization for gastrointestinal bleeding and to educate patients regarding the subsequent risks of recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding, thromboembolism, and mortality. The optimal time to resume anticoagulation is also unknown. This review summarizes the existing literature and available data on the commonly encountered dilemma of restarting anticoagulation therapy after hospitalization for gastrointestinal bleeding.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
2024 A Concerning Trend in Geriatric Pharmacy Merits Evidence-Based Intervention
The effects of polypharmacy on geriatric populations are an emerging concern that merits more exploration. The primary goal of this review was to evaluate the current body of knowledge on polypharmacy and explore the preventive and corrective measures to avoid negative outcomes. Even if a medication has an appropriate indication, polypharmacy in the geriatric population is associated with an increased risk of drug-drug or drug-condition interactions. Recent efforts to prevent polypharmacy include the development of interprofessional teams in clinics dedicated to medication review and reconciliation, deprescription plans aimed to safely discontinue potentially inappropriate medications, and inpatient screening tools that provide prescribing recommendations. In conclusion, polypharmacy affects a high percentage of the geriatric population. Current efforts to address and prevent polypharmacy are ongoing but have not been widely adopted.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
2024 Optimal Cardiovascular Medical Therapy: Current Guidelines and New Developments
Coronary artery disease is a leading cause of mortality worldwide, and patients with obstructive coronary artery disease require optimal cardiovascular medical therapy along with lifestyle modification for secondary prevention of future cardiac events. Optimal medical therapy includes antiplatelet agents, high-intensity statins, beta-blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin II receptor blockers, aldosterone antagonists, and calcium channel blockers. There are differences in the medical therapy guidelines of the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology and the European Society of Cardiology. In addition, there are emerging medical therapies that may be added to future guidelines with additional cardiovascular outcome benefits.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
2024 Dietary Supplements and Bleeding
An estimated one third of United States adults use herbal supplements, often without reporting use to their physicians. These supplements can potentially alter bleeding and coagulation during surgery, and when used concomitantly with anticoagulants. Our objective is to provide a comprehensive review of the evidence of bleeding risks of the most popular herbal and dietary supplements. A PubMed search and review of the literature was performed. We found that garlic and hawthorn supplementation are strongly associated with surgical bleeding independent of anticoagulants; cordyceps sinensis, echinacea, and aloe vera are loosely associated with surgical bleeding independent of anticoagulants. In patients on anticoagulants, ginkgo biloba, chondroitin-glucosamine, melatonin, turmeric, bilberry, chamomile, fenugreek, milk thistle, and peppermint are associated with bleeding risk; no evidence was found for bleeding with these supplements independent of anticoagulants. Fish oil, ginseng, and saw palmetto are not associated with bleeding. Evidence for overall bleeding risk associated with St. John’s Wort, ginger, ginkgo biloba, or cranberry supplementation is conflicting. In conclusion, physicians must be aware of the potential anticoagulant effects of these supplements. It is imperative to report dietary and herbal supplement usage to physicians and is best to discontinue non-essential supplement use 2 weeks prior to surgery.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
CBRE Third Party Representative Compliance Education
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Category
Format
  • Self-study / Enduring
Credits
TRANSWESTERN Third Party Representative Compliance Education
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Category
Format
  • Self-study / Enduring
Credits
BCM Temple Visiting Student Occupational Health Fee
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Category
Format
Credits
2024 Resistant gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors: a definition and guideline to medical and surgical management
Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NETs), also historically known as carcinoids, are tumors derived of hormone-secreting enteroendocrine cells. Carcinoids may be found in the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, appendix, colon, rectum, or pancreas. The biologic behavior of carcinoids differs based on their location, with gastric and appendiceal NETs among the least aggressive and small intestinal and pancreatic NETs among the most aggressive. Ultimately, however, biologic behavior is most heavily influenced by tumor grade. The incidence of NETs has increased by 6.4 times over the past 40 years. Surgery remains the mainstay for management of most carcinoids. Medical management, however, is a useful adjunct and/or definitive therapy in patients with symptomatic functional carcinoids, in patients with unresectable or incompletely resected carcinoids, in some cases of recurrent carcinoid, and in postoperative patients to prevent recurrence. Functional tumors with persistent symptoms or progressive metastatic carcinoids despite therapy are called “resistant” tumors. In patients with unresectable disease and/or carcinoid syndrome, an array of medical therapies is available, mainly including somatostatin analogues, molecular-targeted therapy, and peptide receptor radionuclide therapy. Active research is ongoing to identify additional targeted therapies for patients with resistant carcinoids.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Surgery (ABS) Accredited CME
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance
2024 Moving Beyond Teamwork in the Operating Room to Facilitating Mutual Professional Respect
Psychological safety enables the interpersonal risk-taking necessary for providing safer patient care in the operating room (OR). Limited studies look at psychological safety in the OR from the perspectives of each highly specialized team member. Therefore, we investigated each member’s perspective on the factors that influence psychological safety in the OR. Interviews were conducted with operative team members of a level 1 trauma center in central Texas. The interviews were transcribed, de-identified, and coded by two investigators independently, and thematic analysis was performed. Responses were collected from 21 participants representing all surgical team roles (attending surgeons, attending anesthesiologists, circulating nurses, nurse anesthetists, scrub techs, and residents). Circulating nurse responses were redacted for confidentiality (n = 1). Six major themes influencing psychological safety in the OR were identified. Psychological safety is essential to better, safer patient care. Establishing a climate of mutual respect and suspended judgment in an OR safe for learning will lay the foundation for achieving psychological safety in the OR. Team exercises in building rapport and mutual understanding are important starting points.
Category
  • BUMC Proceedings
Format
  • Journal
Credits
  • 1.00 American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) MOC Part 2
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
  • 1.00 Attendance

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