Gregory Schmidt

865 posts

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Gregory Schmidt

Gregory Schmidt

@_GregSchmidt

Internal Medicine Physician / Weight / Lipids / Healthcare Systems Design / Electronic Health Records

Ottawa, Canada Beigetreten Mayıs 2012
3.8K Folgt1.4K Follower
Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@CoffeeBlackMD I find most useful in finding the patient who has far more age/sex adjusted plaque than would otherwise have expected. Turns the previously throught low or intermediate risk patient into someone worth targeting more intensive ascvd risk reduction targets
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CoffeeBlackMD
CoffeeBlackMD@CoffeeBlackMD·
Coronary calcium scores have some parallel problems as the full body elective MRI but not to the same extent. They are great in the right hands of a cardiologist (or a good internist/FP) that can parse the nuance in intermediate risk patients. Perhaps helping in a decision to start a statin given all the contexts. Negative results are clearly reassuring but the problem comes when you have significant old, hard disease and then what to do about it. In asymptomatic patients should you really be doing any further work up? Including catheterization? We know treatment of asymptomatic lesions isn’t beneficial. The study hasn’t ever shown any serious end of line kind of benefits. It’s never had a good randomized trial. In low risk, affluent worried well patients the study can act as a cash machine. In high risk patients especially the symptomatic, it’s irrelevant. I have a few cardiology followers. They may want to weigh in on how they use and see it. But from my perspective you shouldn’t be spending money just looking to look and this should be a test your treating physician should use in context to help them make decisions.
minerjoe24@minerjoe24

@CoffeeBlackMD What is your opinion of getting a coronary calcium scan?

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Dr Gary McGowan
Dr Gary McGowan@drgarymcgowan·
✅ MSc Preventive Cardiology — First Class Honours. 🔬 Also delighted to receive an award for research excellence, with no small thanks to the outstanding support from my supervisors. Another small step to the dream of becoming a Cardiologist 🫀 @NIPCIRELAND @uniofgalway
Dr Gary McGowan tweet media
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
100% I am generally never disappointed to order imaging in context of severe infection without clear cause or of suspected abdominal source. Number of findings on imaging that change management far outweigh small number of studies return negative. Renal stones. Stercoral colitis. Pyomyositis
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Roger Seheult, MD
Roger Seheult, MD@RogerSeheult·
Note to intensivists: A rule that I’ve kept with and seems to work very well in working with patients in the intensive care unit is that if somebody is admitted to the intensive care unit with urosepsis requiring vasopressors it’s always a good idea to image the urinary drainage system for obstructions and stones. Source control. This self imposed rule has served me very well .
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Gil Carvalho MD PhD🌈🇵🇸
Gil Carvalho MD PhD🌈🇵🇸@NutritionMadeS3·
I was the 1st in my family to ever measure lp(a) High. Pushed for cascade screening. Mother, sister also high. Dozens of family members now measuring Mom has calcium score=850. Always lean, active, no tobacco or alcohol. Now on LLT, ApoB cut in half Knowledge saves lives.
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Adam Cifu
Adam Cifu@adamcifu·
One of my favorite books since 1991. Just got the 5th edition. I’ve also owned the 1st and 3rd.
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David Perell
David Perell@david_perell·
If I could bring one restaurant chain to America, it’d be Flat Iron in London: solid steaks, fairly affordable, simple menu, insanely quick, comfy enough decor, nice enough for a work lunch but casual enough to eat with friends. Asked the waitress about the business and she said there’s ~20 locations in England, ~45 minute waits on the weekend, and the economics work out because they move people in and out so much faster than traditional steakhouses.
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Adam Rodman
Adam Rodman@AdamRodmanMD·
@morgancheatham Do you think that in the near- and medium-term, this shifts the locus of importance towards generalist knowledge or towards specialist knowledge? (something I think a lot about re: medical education reform)
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Morgan Cheatham, MD
Morgan Cheatham, MD@morgancheatham·
prediction: AI will collapse traditional medical specialties as we know them. medical specialties emerged out of necessity. as medicine became more complex, no single physician could master its full scope. we began dividing care by organ systems, technologies, and life stages — structures that mirrored both biology and the way symptoms typically presented. over time, hospitals, licensing bodies, and reimbursement systems ossified these divisions. we learned to think this way not just because it made biological sense, but because it was the only way we could manage complexity.
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Dr Gary McGowan
Dr Gary McGowan@drgarymcgowan·
10-year CVD risk scores in people in their 30s are grossly misleading. People are constantly reassured by such scores, delaying preventive efforts. It's 40-year risk that matters in your 30s... Don't wait for the disease. Get ahead of it!
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Dr Gary McGowan
Dr Gary McGowan@drgarymcgowan·
If you’re eating for health & longevity, ideal outcomes [for most] would include: - weight reduction / leanness - muscle gain / maintenance - lower blood pressure - insulin sensitivity & glycaemic control - lower LDL-C / ApoB & triglycerides What would you add? 🍎
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@DrNadolsky Patient last month told me she wasn’t sure what to do with all her free time now that she isn’t thinking about food all day. She seemed confused that this was how people normally live. And was considering what hobby she’d pick up with all the extra time.
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Dr. Spencer Nadolsky
Dr. Spencer Nadolsky@DrNadolsky·
“I feeling like I’m eating to live instead of living to eat now.” “I’m finally free from all the food thoughts.” - patient who started a GLP-1 med last month
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Dr Gary McGowan
Dr Gary McGowan@drgarymcgowan·
When we recorded the LMHR ep on Sigma (@NutritionDanny & Dr Alan Flanagan), one of the focal points was misleading science communication among the LMHR authors. Amidst the KETO-CTA fiasco, it should be clear why this was such a focus. sigmanutrition.com/episode541/
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@DrNadolsky Exactly. In a group of people exposed to a lot of smoking. Those who have the worst coronaries to start with, did the worst overall.
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@AdamRodmanMD @mkurman88 I agree, although often directionally right, it seems too often mis out on some critical landmark studies about the question asked. I’m not sure if this issue is related in part to data available in its brain vs its search and selection strategy
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Adam Rodman
Adam Rodman@AdamRodmanMD·
@mkurman88 Hope that helps! Like I said, not a very tough question, and I know the literature very well. It gets a C+. Maybe a B-.
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Mariusz Kurman
Mariusz Kurman@mkurman88·
I have it, guys! What should I ask? Give me some challenging topics to compare with OpenAI Deep Research, preferably tough medical questions.
Mariusz Kurman tweet media
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Sam Altman
Sam Altman@sama·
an idea for paid plans: your $20 plus subscription converts to credits you can use across features like deep research, o1, gpt-4.5, sora, etc. no fixed limits per feature and you choose what you want; if you run out of credits you can buy more. what do you think? good/bad?
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Aaron Levie
Aaron Levie@levie·
@gdb Deep Research did what took about ~5+ doctor visits and dozens hours of research to make progress on in about 10 minutes.
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Adam Cifu
Adam Cifu@adamcifu·
What makes me crazy about so much "longevity medicine" is that it is lives in a clinical data free zone. It is based on theory and extrapolation and never considers public costs. Grrrr. That is my complaint for the day.
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@StuartBlitz Broaden your expansion mmr with selling the doctor report templates to save time Have you considered using AI?
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Gregory Schmidt
Gregory Schmidt@_GregSchmidt·
@StuartBlitz 10x that market cap by adding a paid patient portal 100x it with a "second opinion" option for patients
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Stuart Blitz
Stuart Blitz@StuartBlitz·
I’m pretty excited about my new angel investment. Tech friend said he had to manually take his data on a CD from one doctor to another. He had this amazing insight to create a cloud-based solution so data can just flow EMR to EMR. Seems like a $100B company. Anyone interested?
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