2.4 • 649 Ratings
🗓️ 1 August 2021
⏱️ 20 minutes
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Complex regional pain syndrome (1:40), pharmacologic management of agitation in dementia (5:20), semaglutide (7:10), clascoterone for acne (9:20), lung cancer screening (12:20), and management of infants born to mothers with HIV infection (13:50).
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0:00.0 | The AFP podcast is sponsored by the American Academy of Family Physicians, and by One Medical, |
0:07.6 | a primary care practice committed to advancing quality of care nationwide while improving |
0:13.5 | the experiences of clinicians and patients. More details about their philosophy of care, as well |
0:20.6 | as current opportunities for primary care providers across 13 U.S. cities, are at Onemedical.com slash careers slash clinical. Welcome to the American Family Physician Podcast for part two of the July 2021 issue. |
0:48.8 | I'm Jake. |
0:49.6 | I'm Maggie. |
0:50.5 | Still Zuli. |
0:51.6 | We are residents and faculty, mostly residents of the University of Arizona |
0:55.5 | College of Medicine Phoenix Family Medicine residency. Today on the podcast, we'll talk about |
1:00.6 | complex regional pain syndrome, pharmacologic management of agitation, simaglutide, clascotorone, |
1:07.7 | lung cancer screening, and management of infants born to mothers with HIV infection. |
1:13.8 | The opinions expressed in the podcast are our own and do not represent the opinions of the American Academy of Family Physicians, |
1:18.3 | the editor of American Family Physician, or Banner Health. Do not use this podcast for medical advice. |
1:22.6 | Instead, see your own family doctor for medical care. |
1:27.0 | We're on a mission to living the best from America. and family doctor for medical care. |
1:48.0 | We're going to start things off with complex regional pain syndrome from Dr. Dr. Lloyd, Dempsey, and Romero from Pueblo, Colorado. That sounds terrible. What is it? |
1:51.0 | Let's call it CRPS. |
1:53.0 | CRPS is a rare chronic pain disorder that can develop, usually in a distal extremity, |
1:59.0 | four to six weeks after a direct trauma like an injury or surgery. |
2:04.2 | There are two types based on nerve involvement, with or without, and the treatment is the same for both. |
2:10.1 | It almost always presents as pain out of proportion to the injury, and with symptoms like burning, tingling, stabbing, numbness, but can also present |
2:19.9 | as weakness, edema, skin color changes, or warmth. People may also report things like insomnia |
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