In this fascinating discussion, Matt Freedman, a pulmonary fellow at UVA, presents the complex case of an immunocompromised patient suffering from respiratory failure. Joining him are fellow doctors John Popovich, who discusses diagnostic strategies, and Tim Scialla, who offers insights on bronchoscopy and shock assessment. They delve into challenges of diagnosing ARDS in immunosuppressed patients, weighing the risks of steroids against potential infections, and the intricacies of shock evaluation using POCUS. Their expert commentary reveals the nuances of critical care management.
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insights INSIGHT
Host Guides The Differential
Anchor your differential on the type of immunosuppression; HIV/AIDS with low CD4 emphasizes T-cell pathogens like PCP, TB, CMV, and endemic fungi.
Remember common CAP pathogens still matter, and ART can lower bacterial pneumonia risk even with low CD4.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Begin With Usual Pneumonia Tests
Start with the usual pneumonia workup (sputum, blood cultures, urine antigens, viral swabs) even in immunocompromised hosts.
Add targeted tests for likely opportunists based on geography and host, e.g., LDH, beta-D-glucan, galactomannan, urine histo/blasto.
insights INSIGHT
Value Of LDH And Beta-D-Glucan
LDH and beta-D-glucan have strong negative predictive value for PCP; normal results make PCP much less likely.
Use these markers especially when bronchoscopy is delayed or high-risk to help rule out PCP noninvasively.
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Today, we’re virtually visiting the University of Virginia for another Fellows’ Case Files. This is a fantastic case that covers ARDS, the infectious work up of an immunosuppressed patient, and the evaluation of undifferentiated shock. Please let us know what you think of the episode and always feel free to reach out with interesting cases!
Meet Our Guests
John Popovich completed his residency training and chief year at UVA and has stayed on there for his pulmonary and critical care fellowship.
Tim Scialla is an associate professor of medicine at UVA. He completed his residency and fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital where he was also an ACS. His clinical and research focuses are advanced airways disease. He is also the program director of the PCCM fellowship.
Matt Freedman completed his residency training at Virginia Commonwealth University and is currently a second year fellow at University of Virginia.
Case Presentation
Patient: 52-year-old male with psoriasis, HIV/AIDS (CD4 count: 71), presenting with progressive shortness of breath, fever, non-productive cough, and weight loss.