2.4 • 649 Ratings
🗓️ 15 January 2025
⏱️ 25 minutes
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Jaundice in adults (1:30), gepirone for depression (8:20), steroid injections for degenerative joint disease of the hip (12:20), dysuria (14:50), hip osteoarthritis (19:00), and diabetic kidney disease (21:00).
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0:00.0 | The AFP podcast is brought to you by the American Academy of Family Physicians and by FP Comprehensive 2025. |
0:07.3 | Refresh your knowledge and earn up to 60 CME credits. |
0:10.7 | With 48 key family medicine topics, four years of searchable FP Essentials, clinical monographs, and 960 questions with answers. |
0:18.5 | To learn more, go to aafp.org forward slash FP comprehensive. |
0:28.5 | Welcome to the American Family Physician Podcast for part one of the January 2025 issue. |
0:35.0 | I'm Jake. I'm Sydney. I'm Sati. And we are residents and faculty, mostly residents, |
0:40.4 | of the University of Arizona College of Medicine Phoenix Family Medicine Residency. |
0:45.1 | Today on the podcast, we'll talk about jaundice, G. Peron for treatment of major depressive disorder, |
0:52.0 | degenerative joint disease of the hip, evaluation and differential |
0:56.3 | for dysuria, we'll have a practice guideline update, and we'll look at a Cochran review |
1:02.2 | on ACE or ARB therapy for preventing diabetic kidney disease. |
1:07.6 | The opinions expressed in the podcast are our own and do not represent the opinions with the American Academy of Family Physicians, the Editor of American Family |
1:13.6 | Physician or Banner Health. |
1:14.9 | Do not use this podcast for medical advice. |
1:16.7 | Instead, see your own family doctor for medical care. |
1:21.2 | We're on a mission to live in the best from American feminization. |
1:28.3 | On a mission, delivering the best from American Femitization Automation Delivered the best from American Femitization |
1:32.3 | All right, let's kick things off with a main topic, evaluation of jaundice and adults. |
1:39.3 | And it comes to us from Dr. Nelson, Mulani, and Seguil from Michigan State University and the University of Florida. |
1:47.4 | Jondis is an indication of hyper-bilirubinemia. |
1:50.8 | Jondis typically becomes apparent when bilirubin levels exceed three milligrams per deciliter. |
1:56.2 | Jondis indicates a derangement in Billy-Rubin processing. |
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