Phorest & Trees
It’s me birthday
week…And of course the old ones
here. Hope you enjoy!
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Physician Finance,
Workplace Attire, Overlearning, & lotsa Jobs out there
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- I’m
married to a guju JD/MBA daughter of an accountant, so lazy me
didn’t bother until now. You need to understand personal
finance better than I did. I
found this site to be useful and I’ve vetted it for you.
- Here’s
the most recent evidence on how attire affects whether patients
believe you know what you’re doing. I think this is required reading for
the residents.
- Many
trainees want to do “just enough” to get it right. But there may be some
benefit to overlearning
- My friend Dr. John
Norbury has joined Texas Tech University as new PMR Division Chief
under Dept of Neurology. He tells of 3 positions: One is “for junior
faculty, one who will be a consult/outpatient MSK physician and one will
be inpatient...neurorehab would be a plus. Both physicians
would include a part time VA appointment and would have an medical
education component and the ability to tailor to clinical interests or
research, if desired. They would also include public service loan
forgiveness. Also, the VA
here is looking for a CMO (outpatient clinic). Great senior
leadership team and beautiful brand new facility. Having a
more seasoned PM&R doc with some administrative talents in that
role would be super helpful, but I'm sure any specialty which cares for
veterans in the outpatient world would work. And taxes are way
less than New Jersey.“
- Seattle VA
/ U Wash opportunity: “recruiting
for a PM&R physician with clinical, education and also ideally
research expertise in Amputee care. The position will be 100% based at
VA Puget Sound in Seattle with clinical care focused on Amputee care
with resident and fellow teaching responsibilities. VA Puget Sound has a
large rehab focused research program and a candidate with a history of
research funding and scholarly publications will find ample opportunity
here for independent research and collaborations with current
researchers.”
- TBI opening
in Portland Oregon VA
- Not
sure if Minneapolis VA is still looking but they wanted an amputee
physiatrist too.
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AANEM & EDx
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- Quantitative
electromyography: Normative data in paraspinal muscles : talks about
the “abnormal” findings seen in asymptomatic patients. Very similar to
how we approach at the VA.
- There was a fascinating
discussion thread recently posing the question as to how much of the
distal onset latency prolongation can really be attributed to axon loss
in the setting of low amplitudes. (Residents should have access through
the training portal. The rest of you can feel the FOMO)
- Attached is a
case of EDB pseudohypertrophy in the setting of peripheral
polyneuropathy
- Prognostic
indicators for Lumbar decompression for foot drop…Duh
- The AAN supports banning
choke holds.
- Intro and
Discussion of this
study on MRI findings in Statin induced myopathy are helpful for the
residents. “MRI features of
statin-associated anti-HMGCR myopathy can be differentiated from other
types of myopathies, such as sporadic inclusion-body myositis and
dermatomyositis, in terms of distribution of tissue edema and fatty
infiltration. In dermatomyositis, edema is often found within the fascia
and subcutaneous tissue,13 which is uncommon in anti-HMGCR myopathy. In
sporadic inclusion-body myositis, fatty replacement is most prominent in
the anterior thigh, with relative sparing of rectus femoris,14-16
whereas anti-HMGCR myopathy demonstrates preferential posterior
compartmental fatty infiltration. On the other hand, MRI features of
statin-associated anti-HMGCR myopathy may share similarities with
anti–signal recognition particle (SRP) myopathy, another subclass of
immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy with shared histopathological
hallmarks and proposed pathogenesis.17 In anti-SRP myopathy, an
anterolateral pattern of muscle edema in the anterior compartment and
fatty replacement of hamstring muscle has been reported,18 but with less
symmetry and more severe fatty replacement than anti-HMGCR myopathy.”
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MSK & PAIN
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- Semantics are
important and the spine pain community is taking a step in the right
direction by reassessing the word “Failed Back
Surgery Syndrome.” See attached for the letter from IASP. It’s still
woefully oversimplifying if you ask me. (more on semantics in the TREES
section of this email)
- Residents may
appreciate the attached brief review of Genicular
nerve blocks/RFA for knee OA. Bottom line is that the literature is
conflicting (esp the anatomy) but it’s an option I refer for in non-op
endstage or post TKA patients.
- I somehow still
get the RIC journal club emails and two were shareworthy (hoping to
discuss with Dr. Ma)
- This 2018 ACORN study’s
Intro section is excellent for R1s. The study was excellent too. I’ve included
my “GMNR” on AC joint for R1s as well.
- The attached 2021
Multicenter GRASP RCT from Lancet found a course of PT no better than a
single PT best practice advice session + corticosteroid injection. If
you want the details of the interventions like I did, they are found here.
- Opioid
Tapering Carries Significant Risks according to this JAMA study.
There could be inherent bias as these are patients likely chosen for
their risks pre-taper. I guess the take-home is to offer support while
tapering. Ate
- JAMA
saying statins may not be any more likely than placebo to cause
muscle aches. This was the first time I had heard of “N-of-1 clinical
trials.” See this
if you are confused as well.
- Predictors for TFCC
outcomes: above elbow splinting better than short-arm; worse with
complete foveal TFCC tear and a dorsally subluxated DRUJ.
- My father used to
pay 1 dollar for each pound his obese patients lost each visit and it
worked (they had to pay him a dollar for each pound they gained). Financial
incentives work but should CMS pay for them?
- Despite the
possibility of responder bias, rheumatologic
flare has not really been associated with COVID vaccine.
- I only read the abstract
but this may open up options for RA patients that previously had cancer.
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Trees
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