Sunday, July 11, 2021
Updated Medication Checklist for Psychiatrists
Wednesday, July 7, 2021
An Outstanding Paper on Atrial Fibrillation
I have been fascinated by atrial fibrillation since I was a third-year medical student. I was doing a Medicine rotation and examining a middle-aged man. Listening to his heart sounds was the first time I heard the irregularly irregular heart rhythm characteristic of atrial fibrillation. It was such an outrageous and unexpected sound compared to what I was used to that I felt a little panicky. Why wasn’t this patient experiencing more symptoms and even more unexplainably – why doesn’t he sense that there is something wrong with his heart beat? Since then, I have treated hundreds of patients with atrial fibrillation. I ask them all if they can sense the irregular heart beat and in the people I see about half of them can. Being a psychiatrist, diagnosing and treating atrial fibrillation is technically not my “job”. But it is currently such a prevalent condition that a brief examination typically triggered by vital signs and noting a pulse irregularity followed by an electrocardiogram is all that is needed. Atrial fibrillation has considerable mortality and morbidity associated with the most feared complication of stroke. A good friend of mine developed renal failure from a combination of atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter and required ablation procedures to restore normal sinus rhythm. Two relatives had strokes associated with atrial fibrillation resulting in disability and ultimately death. Both had atrial fibrillation for about 30 years. One of them was 92 years old, using digoxin for rate control, and not on anticoagulants. The other was 92 years old, using diltiazem for rate control, and on warfarin at therapeutic doses. He had two strokes about 10 years apart on the warfarin and multiple episodes of nuisance bleeding or excessive bleeding from minor injuries due to anticoagulation that did not require medical attention. Another friend had pulmonary complications from an antiarrhythmic drug that he was taking for a new onset of atrial fibrillation and died as a result of those complications. Sixteen years ago – I developed lone atrial fibrillation while speedskating and have been on antiarrhythmics since that time.
When you see all of those problems associated with a
condition and have had it yourself, you tend to read more about it than the
average person. Reading about atrial
fibrillation is generally a frustrating task. The evidence base for treating
the condition seems to be in a state of flux. For years the research seemed to
say that rate control and rhythm control led to equivalent outcomes. When life
style measures were included, the rhythm control strategies seemed superior.
Even the question of anticoagulation with novel oral anticoagulants of NOACs
for stroke prevention based on a scoring system has been called into question recently.
That brings me to the topic of this blog post and that is
the single best summary of information about atrial fibrillation that I have
seen anywhere - at least for nonspecialists in that area.
The paper was written this year in the New England Journal
of Medicine (1). It starts out with a case description of a 63-year-old man with a
new onset of atrial fibrillation. The authors discuss the disease in detail and
treatment recommendations consistent with their discussion. What I really like
about this paper is that they are discussing phenotypes of atrial fibrillation
and I do not see that happening very often in real clinical situations. The
phenotypes they discuss are paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, persistent
atrial fibrillation, and long-standing persistent atrial
fibrillation. They have an excellent
figure in their paper that was unfortunately prohibitively expensive for me to
try to post here, but the basic idea is that there are distinct anatomical and
electrophysiological substrates for each of those phenotypes. In the paper the
phenotypes are labeled as “clinical profiles”. His phenotypes have prognostic
considerations since the authors make the point that there is a gradation in
the likelihood of conversion to normal sinus rhythm and maintaining that
rhythm with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation being the most likely to convert and
maintain a normal sinus rhythm and long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation
being the least likely to convert. Just knowing that much about atrial
fibrillation is a significant advance compared with most of the clinical discussions
that I hear.
The second feature in this paper that I really like is that
atrial fibrillation is not necessarily a benign condition. For years the
discussion has been controlling the rate or rhythm and in most cases they have
been considered to be equivalent. Many clinicians have their first experience
with atrial fibrillation like I had. They are doing a physical examination
outpatient for another reason and they notice they are in atrial fibrillation.
Depending on physiological factors that patients irregularly irregular heart
rate may already be rate controlled. I have talked with many people over the
years who knew that their heart rate was irregular because their spouse noticed
it and they did not do anything about it for years. Atrial fibrillation is a risk factor
for embolic strokes as well as dementia, death, and heart failure. Persistent
tachycardia can cause cardiomyopathy and reduced cardiac output can lead to
renal failure. The authors suggest that
a heart rate of 110 bpm or greater might lead to cardiomyopathy but they also
suggest it can occur at a lower rate. This is an interesting observation
because the most recent review in UpToDate on sinus tachycardia suggests it is
generally a benign condition, however an irregular tachycardia because of
reduced cardiac output is likely a different matter.
In addition, the patient can be symptomatic from reduce
cardiac output with lightheadedness, dizziness, fatigue, decreased exercise
tolerance, palpitations, hypertension, and an exacerbation of symptoms of underlying coronary
artery disease. The lesson for psychiatrists is if you notice that a patient
has atrial fibrillation it cannot be approached casually. Atrial fibrillation
is associated with significant medical comorbidities such as underlying
structural coronary disease, obesity, sleep apnea, hypertension,
hyperlipidemia, and diabetes mellitus. If the patient has had limited contact
with primary care physicians the comorbid conditions may have gone unnoticed.
It makes sense to ask about additional symptoms in the review of systems as
well as family history and whether that patient is seen primary care physician
or cardiologist recently. I would have
no problem referring a patient with tachycardia, expected symptoms, or risk factors to
an emergency department for acute stabilization if I could not get them seen in
a primary care clinic.
The authors go into treatment of atrial fibrillation as
basically a rate control strategy, a rhythm control strategy, and a strategy to
address comorbid medical conditions. They
review rate control with beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers and prefer
beta-blockers. They consider a number of antiarrhythmics and the risks and
benefits of those medications. They
consider catheter ablation - either radiofrequency pulmonary vein isolation or
cryoablation as being more effective for treating and preventing recurrent
atrial fibrillation. The recurrence rates are relatively high even after the
ablation procedures, so continued antiarrhythmic medications may be necessary.
Once a patient has stable treated atrial fibrillation, the
main task for the psychiatrist is to make sure that any prescribed medications
do not interfere with the cardiac medications at either the pharmacokinetic or
pharmacodynamic level. QTc prolongation is a primary consideration since
several of the agents used prolong the QTc interval or affect other cardiac conduction. At the pharmacokinetic level there is the
possible risk of decreased metabolism of beta-blockers and increasing
bradycardia and hypotension. If I have any doubts all about medication
combinations I am usually in touch with the patient’s cardiologist or primary
care physician before making those changes. All of the patients I see with
atrial fibrillation also have their blood pressure and pulse taken at every visit
along with the description of symptoms and potential medication side effects. That means I never practice in an environment where I can't do that. I
will also review how well their comorbid conditions are being treated
particularly hypertension, sleep apnea, and diabetes mellitus. I will provide
them with concrete advice on how to approach those problems and whether or not
they need to be seeing their primary care physician sooner than scheduled.
This is also an opportunity to discuss any comorbid
substance use problems. Alcohol is a definite precipitant of atrial
fibrillation. I have had patients never experience another episode by stopping
alcohol. I have also had patients report that they can tell when their alcohol level reaches a certain point because they will go into atrial
fibrillation for several hours until that alcohol is metabolized. Stimulant
medications are also a risk because they increase sympathetic tone, increase
heart rate, increase blood pressure. All three of those changes can trigger an
episode of atrial fibrillation. Cannabis
can have a fairly potent sympathomimetic effect by acutely lowering blood
pressure leading to a reflex tachycardia. Atrial fibrillation has been reported as one of several cardiac
arrhythmias associated with cannabis use (2). Interestingly, the authors of the
NEJM article state that caffeine is not a precipitant. There are no qualifiers
on that statement and I think it is based primarily on epidemiological
evidence. Caffeine intake is always important to quantify because of its wide
variability across the population and general reputation of being a benign compound. There are
segments of the population that consume large quantities of caffeinated
beverages every day and experience the expected side effects of anxiety (in
some cases panic attacks), agitation, insomnia, and hyperadrenergic effects but they seem
unaware that these symptoms are related to their caffeine consumption.
Certainly consumption at that level can directly or indirectly precipitate an episode of atrial fibrillation.
That is my brief review of the NEJM article in atrial
fibrillation. I encourage all psychiatrists to get a copy of this paper, read
it, and keep it for reference. I am not suggesting that psychiatrists treat this condition. I am suggesting that they recognize it - even if it has not been diagnosed and know what to do when that occurs. The reality is that in adult psychiatry no matter
what your practice setting there will be a significant number of people with
atrial fibrillation and other arrhythmias as well as all of the known comorbidities.
You cannot treat those people unless you know about these conditions, the
comorbidities, and how to avoid complications.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
References:
1: Michaud GF,
Stevenson WG. Atrial Fibrillation. N Engl J Med. 2021 Jan 28;384(4):353-361.
doi: 10.1056/NEJMcp2023658. PMID: 33503344.
2: Richards JR,
Blohm E, Toles KA, Jarman AF, Ely DF, Elder JW. The association of cannabis use
and cardiac dysrhythmias: a systematic review. Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2020
Sep;58(9):861-869. doi: 10.1080/15563650.2020.1743847. Epub 2020 Apr 8. PMID:
32267189.
Supplementary:
Common and uncommon medications listed in this article used in atrial fibrillation for rate control, antiarrhythmic properties, and anticoagulation. I added additional warnings and general type of medications that might require avoiding based on pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic considerations. Important to keep in mind that all medications vary in their ability to affect these mechanisms as well as therapeutic mechanisms. That includes significant differences between medications in the same class. That leads to qualifiers like "all possible mechanisms leading to complications or serious adverse effects may not be listed" (in this package insert or computerized drug interaction program). Almost every time I am seeing a patient on these medications - it requires a study of the medication combination, even if they are taking a psychiatric medication that appears to be working. Baseline cardiac symptoms related to the arrhythmia also need to be established as well as the patient's plan to obtain assistance if they worsen.
Additional qualifier (if it is not obvious). Psychiatrists prescribe beta blockers (metoprolol, propranolol, pindolol, etc). Psychiatrists can diagnose atrial fibrillation. Psychiatrists do not manage atrial fibrillation but need to know what to do acutely and how to avoid complications of the following medical therapies from drug interactions with psychiatric medications. Practically all of the antiarrhythmics in the following table are prescribed by Cardiologists and subsequently managed by primary care physicians although many patients continue to see Cardiologists in follow up. Like all areas of medicine the limits of technical expertise need to be recognized. I worked with Cardiologists who became psychiatrists and they restricted their practice to medications prescribed by psychiatrists.
Bunch TJ, Cutler MJ. Is pulmonary vein isolation still the cornerstone in atrial fibrillation ablation? J Thorac Dis 2015;7(2):132-141. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2014.12.46
Sunday, June 27, 2021
The Spiritual Journey From High School Football
About 2 years ago my wife said to me one morning “who is this guy who keeps texting me?” I looked at her phone and recognized the name immediately. He was the quarterback from my high school football team. More correctly it was the high school football team I was on when I was a sophomore in high school. I had the immediate association to his physical appearance and considerable athletic ability. To this day he probably was the most gifted high school athlete I had ever seen. He didn’t look like a high school player - more like a college player. He was also an excellent basketball player and sprinter on the track team. He was the fastest man over 100 yards in high school. Why was he suddenly texting my wife?
He was going to be inducted into the local athletic Hall of
Fame. He was trying to organize a reunion of our 1966 undefeated high school
football team. His plan was to get as many of us back there as possible -
details to follow. There were 2 or 3 subsequent postponements of the reunion
due to the pandemic. But yesterday on 6/26/2021 it finally happened. Twelve of
the 22 players reunited for about 3 hours at a local bar. As far as I know three of my
teammates are deceased and the remaining players could not be located or
decided not come. The head coach was also in attendance. The assistant coach is deceased. All of the attendees got
baseball caps with their name and numbers embroidered on the back. The front of
each cap simply said “Undefeated 1966 AHS Football”.
Unlike my high school reunion, I had the opportunity to say
something to all my teammates. I remembered who they all were and details from
our past. I know that many had significant problems in life including
life-threatening health problems. I learned about their relatives who had
similar problems. But most of all I learned about what that football season
meant to the people who made it back to the meeting. I know that memories from
over 50 years ago can get complicated and distorted. As we all sat around a
table there was a collection of newspaper articles and photographs from 1966 to
provide partial corroboration. There were some intense memories from the past
that haunted some of the players. There was also active feedback from the coach
about a few incidents where he realized that the plays he was calling were
being ignored. My intention in writing this post is not to identify people with
problems or criticize people, but to look at an event with obvious meaning as
well as the meaning that may have been missed at the time.
Our quarterback started out with some self-disclosure of
mistakes he had made during the championship season. Other players who were
involved with those mistakes corroborated them immediately. Our center for
example recalled a fumble on the opponents 1 yard line and the fact that it
occurred on a silent count. For 5 decades our quarterback was thinking the
fumble was his mistake, but our center let him know that he forgot the count.
There were several other incidents involving typical football mistakes that
people had been thinking about since 1966. Resilience came up as an outcome of the
coaches role in helping us overcome adversity.
A significant injury was discussed. From the description it
sounded like a traumatic brain injury, but back in those days any head injury
with partial or significant loss of consciousness was referred to as a
concussion. There was no grading system but persistent confusion or memory loss
might eliminate a player from the game although that was certainly not
guaranteed. More than one concussion led to a medical evaluation but again
there was limited medical expertise in traumatic brain injuries. It led me to
recall a lot of headaches from playing football. We would practice twice a day
in hot weather hitting a blocking sled and doing full contact drills. There
were days where the headaches just did not clear up. I was also reminded of the only significant
traumatic brain injury that I sustained when I ran into one of my teammates
playing in a touch football league. In fact, I approached him at this reunion
and joked that the last time he and I met - I was out of it for the next 24
hours. I had to explain that we were both defensive backs running full speed
and I ran into a shoulder after diving for the ball. He did not recall the
incident.
There was a strong underdog theme. At one point in the year,
we did not have enough players to scrimmage so the coaches had to play defensive
half backs. Many of the teams we played against had much larger players and
significant depth. That led me to recall
our coaches quote to the press: “We are not big - but we’re slow”. Our coach recalled that in some of the venues
we were ridiculed for looking raggedy and not having many players. We were accused of running up the score against some teams to improve our overall ranking. The coach found this humorous because there was no second team to put in. At one point
during the discussion, one of our receivers took over and talked about how he
and one of his friends in the offensive and defensive line got psyched up for
the game. He gave an inspiring and expletive filled speech about his love of
football, how he liked physical contact, how he liked playing offense and
defense. He presented it with such vigor that it seemed like he was ready to
play - right then.
For some reason, I had forgotten how tough these guys were.
We were almost all working class. Half
of us were from the East End and half from the West End of town. Some played with significant physical disabilities. It was the
height of the Vietnam War and many would go into the Marines and the Army after
graduation. Many would go on to play college football. I would just catch
glimpses of their lives from time to time.
Everyone had a unique trajectory from that winning football season to
where they were on June 26. At one point
a small group asked me what my trajectory was and I told them a variation of a
story I have been telling for the past 10 years:
The only reason I ended up going to college was to play
football, be a football coach, and teach physical education. I had a football scholarship to a small
college in the area, but within a few weeks, I developed a gangrenous appendix
and was hospitalized for a week. The
coach came in and told me that the scholarship was mine even though I could not
play anymore (I had a healing surgical scar in my side that was still healing
after a drain was removed). I probably was headed to be a version of a hippy
anyway. Another professor visited me and told me to forget about Phy Ed and
football and concentrate on something else. I had excellent chemistry and biology professors and knew that I wanted to be like them and know what they knew. From there it was a change to biology and chemistry, the Peace Corps, a plant tissue culture lab and
medical school.”
That’s the short version.
There are embellishments for comedic relief and more details if anybody
wanted to hear it. I leave out the heavy
parts about being depressed to the point my grandfather showed up one day to
encourage me to stay in college and not knowing what was wrong with me until I
developed severe abdominal pain. I leave out the part about not taking a student deferment during the lottery for the draft. A high lottery number rather than a conscious decision kept me from being drafted. All part of the lack of a coherent plan. Nobody wants to hear about all of that. I
never played college football. The point
is – I would never have stepped into that sequence of events culminating in
medical school and psychiatric residency without that football scholarship. I
never would have had that football scholarship without playing with this team
and being coached by this coach. Some people will tell me that sequence of
events would have happened anyway. That I would have made it happen through another
channel. Whenever I mention being lucky on this trajectory, I encounter aphorisms
like “Luck is just preparation meeting opportunity” and others. But I really was not prepared to do anything at that point.
The only thing I was
prepared to do in high school was play football. The teaching and guidance side
was totally lacking. I can not recall a single piece of good advice that I received
from a teacher or guidance counselor in those years. And the teaching was atrocious. You showed up, put in the
time, did not create any problems and graduated from high school. The blue-collar
ethos of education. You did not have a
plan until you got to the next stage. The modern-day stories of high pressure
on high school kids to get into an Ivy League schools and parents going to
extraordinary and in some cases illegal lengths to get them in - is lost on me. I am the poster child for getting into whatever college wants you and
establishing goals after getting there.
Football was the initial pathway. At the Reunion, the coach discussed some of
his initiatives including the first strength training program at the school along
with associated competitions. I remember summer training sessions including agility
drills. I excelled in agility drills and
back and forth sprinting drills. In my senior year, I could equal or beat the
fastest running back in the agility drill even though he would beat me by a
mile in 100 meters. These summer sessions were something we all looked forward
to and it was the only planned activity in my life for the 3 years of high school. The Coach gave
us a glimpse of what it took for him to implement these plans and all of the resistance
he met along the way. That resistance came
in the form of administrators claiming that he was running afoul of certain
regulations, personality conflicts, and suggesting that he should work the
pre-season for free even though he was already undercompensated for the amount
of work he was doing. Providing me with some structure to start to get my life
together came at a considerable cost to the only guy who was doing it.
Several of my teammates provided additional stories about
the immediate benefits of coaching. How to play against a much larger man with
limited lateral movement. How to make
adjustments during the game, based on observations by coaches who were at
ground level on the side lines, attending to the injured on the sidelines, and changing overall game logistics. High school coaching is a multi-tasking job and school
districts get their money's worth from coaches.
One of the most important aspects of my life trajectory has been identifying with teachers along the way. Most of that emphasis was in college at the conscious level. But did it occur in high school football? I was never encouraged to play any sports by my father. I learned after his death that he was quite accomplished in baseball and softball in his early twenties. By the time I knew him well, he had been working a thankless job for twenty years. The only sports advice he ever gave me was: "Look - if you want to play sports be clear that you are playing it for you and not for me." He did live to see this football team and attended the end of season banquet prior to his death in 1967. I never got the chance to completely understand his sports advice, but speculate that it was from having to fish every day during The Depression to supply food for his family of origin - whether he wanted to or not.
Both of
our coaches were young men, accomplished athletes, and had unique personas. I remember
the head coach bench pressing a significant amount of weight even though he was
a quarterback in college. For the rest of my family, sports were something you
did into your early 20s and then you settled into a fairly sedentary lifestyle.
Out of college and then again out of med school I embarked on a lifelong
schedule of rigorous training for no reason other than being able to do it. That continues to this day. Would I have
logged all of this activity if I had not played high school football with this
coach? Probably not. Was there a degree of unconscious identification with this coach? Probably.
The developmental aspects of high school football are
undeniable and the stage we were all at during the reunion was undeniably
different from high school. High school male athletes are competitive either by choice
or necessity. It was probably the most significant motivator. I can remember
thinking about the difference between competing with myself and competing with
others as I was running a long sprinting drill in the 90 degree heat that occasionally
happens in northern Wisconsin. In that drill 5-10 players spread out across the
field and run out to the 5 yard line and back and then the 10 yard line and
back until they have reached the 50-yard line and back. At some point during that drill you realize
that competition is irrelevant because it really comes down to survival and in
that sense you are competing against your own physical limitations. That familiar mind set was with me for the
next several decades of cycling and speed skating. With a single exception - I
preferred to do both activities alone – just me and the rhythmic breathing and sweating
of that familiar sprinting drill.
The competitive aspects of high school sports also play out
in other ways. Clique formation, hazing, bullying, sarcastic comments, and various
forms of acting out that are expected of teenagers who we now know don’t have
fully developed brains for another 10 years. That was moderated to some extent
by the shared suffering of football. At
the Reunion it was fairly clear that there were many accomplishments over the
course of these lifetimes but also much suffering. We were all grateful to have
survived so far and saddened by the loss of our teammates who did not.
55 years had passed and, in some ways, we were a better
team.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
Postscript:
If I am correct in my analysis (or not) - I am grateful to have had this experience in high school. I am grateful for my teammates many of whom I consider to be friends but also the Coach and Assistant Coach who clearly did not get enough credit for what they did. I made the common mistake of also taking that coaching for granted until I realized that my entire career may have been based on it.
The commemorative cap:
I don't want to give anyone the impression that this is an endorsement for football or other contact sports. Football is a collision sport and there is an expected morbidity associated with collisions. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is one outcome that has received a lot of press. My speculation is that spinal problems also occur as the result of spinal compression and hyperextension movements that are harder to detect due to the high prevalence of spinal problems in the general population that does not play contact sports. One of my teammates sustained a cervical spine fracture from football but it did not result in paralysis. As a psychiatrist, I have seen a significant number of people with traumatic brain injuries and severe musculoskeletal injuries from collision sports. The number of women with those injuries has increased as their exposure to these sports (soccer, lacrosse, ice hockey) has increased. I have seen young men and woman in their early 20s with significant disabilities from these injuries. In some cases they have also had severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) from either the injury or the subsequent course of treatment.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
How Physicians Think
One of the more interesting aspects of my career has been contemplating how physicians make decisions on both the diagnostic and therapeutic side. Early in my career there was an explosion of activity in this area. Much of it had to do with internal medicine. There were computerized programs that were designed to assist physician decision-making. There were also entire courses taught at the CME level by experts in the field. At the time those experts included Jerome Kassirer, Stephen Pauker, Harold Sox, Richard Kopelman, Alvan Feinstein, and others. The New England Journal of Medicine has a long-standing feature entitled Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital that showcases both diagnostic reasoning and the associated clinicopathological correlates. They added additional articles and a long standing feature on diagnostic decision making. After studying the subject area for about 10 years, I started to teach my own version to 3rd and 4th year medical students. It was focused on not mistaking a medical disorder for a psychiatric one. It included a complete review of cognitive errors in that setting and how to prevent them. I taught that course for about 10 years.
There are a lot of ideas about psychiatrists and how they
may or may not diagnose and treat medical disorders. Systematic biases affect
the administrative and environmental systems where psychiatrists work. Many psychiatrists are very comfortable at
the interface of internal medicine or neurology and psychiatry. The most common
bias about psychiatrists is that other medical conditions need to be “ruled
out” before the patient is referred to a psychiatrist. From a psychiatric
perspective the real day-to-day problems include inadequate assessment due to
an inability to communicate with the patient and considerable medical
comorbidity. Psychiatrists who work in those problem areas need to be competent
in recognizing new medical diagnoses and making sure that their prescribed
treatment does not adversely affect a person with pre-existing medical disorder.
Against that backdrop I decided to read 2 relatively new
books. Both of them have the same title “How Doctors Think”. One book
was written by Jerome Groopman, MD hematologist-oncologist by clinical
specialty. The other book is written by Kathyrn Montgomery, PhD – a professor
of Bioethics, Humanities, and Medicine. As might be expected from the writers’
qualifications Groopman is writing more from the standard perspective of a
physician with an intense interest in medical decision making and Montgomery is
describing the clinical process and analyzing it from the unique perspective of
philosophy and the humanities. It follows that even though the titles are the same
these are two very different books.
Groopman’s approach is to use a case-based style of looking
at medical decision-making from the perspective of several clinicians-including
his own work. The mistakes that occur are teaching moments and are explained
from the perspective of heuristics or common cognitive biases. It is the
approach I used in my course on preventing cognitive errors associated with
psychiatric diagnoses. To cite one example, he describes an athletic forest
ranger in his forties. The kind of a guy an internist might say: “I am not
worried about his heart – he does his own stress test every day.” He noticed increasing chest discomfort for a
few days without any associated cardiopulmonary symptoms. He presented for an
assessment on a day when the pain did not go away. He was seen and thoroughly
examined. There were no physical
symptoms, exam findings, or laboratory finding to suggest a cardiac problem and
he was released from the emergency department.
He returned a few days later with a myocardial infarction. Discussions with the attending physician
indicate that there were two issues associated with the missed diagnosis of
cardiac chest pain – the generally healthy appearance of the patient and a lack
of any positive tests indicating coronary artery disease. Groopman discusses it from the perspective of
representativeness bias (p 44) or being affected by a prototype –
in this case the patient’s apparent level of fitness and attributing the chest
pain to musculoskeletal pain rather than pain of cardiac origin.
This case also allowed for a discussion of attribution
errors especially if the patient fits a negative stereotype. In the next case, a 70 yr old patient with
alcohol use presents with and enlarged nodular liver on exam. The presumptive diagnosis is alcoholic
cirrhosis and the team’s plan was to discharge him back home as soon as
possible. Closer examination confirmed that the patient was not drinking that
much and searching for other causes of liver disease resulted in a diagnosis of
Wilson’s disease. For most of the book,
Groopman uses this technique to illustrate substantial errors, the kind of
cognitive bias that it reflects, and corrective action. The reality of “making
mistakes on living people” comes though.
He recognized the importance of pattern matching and
pattern recognition in clinical practice. There is an initial conversation with
a physician that collapses pattern recognition to stereotypes and their
associated shortcomings. He elaborates
on the concept and quotes a cognitive scientist to illustrate that pattern
recognition may not require any conscious reasoning at all. An expert can arrive at a diagnosis in about
20 seconds that may take a medical student or resident 30 minutes. Experts
begin collecting information about the patient on contact and are immediately
considering diagnostic possibilities. I have personally had this experience many
times, typically for acute neurological syndromes (strokes, cerebral edema,
encephalitis, meningitis) in patients who were referred for me to see in a
hospital setting. Pattern matching clearly occurs in the diagnostic process,
but it is more difficult to write about and discuss than verbal reasoning.
A major strength of the book is a fairly detailed look at
uncertainty in medicine. The diagnoses are not etched in stone and no outcomes
are guaranteed based on the accuracy of the diagnosis or not. He introduces a
pediatric cardiologist who advances the argument that most of his cases are
novel and that there are no set guidelines for what he treats. Even more
complicated is that fact that what may appear to be sound science-based
treatments like closing an atrial septal defect with a 2:1 shunt in kids it can
be an illusion. Many of those children
do well without the surgery and many have had unnecessary surgery. The cardiologist
also points out that study of this kind of problem is impossible because of the
length of time it would take to do a randomized study.
Another major strength is advice to patients about how to
keep the doctor they are seeing thinking about their case. Numerous examples are given ranging from
seeing large number of healthy patients where abnormalities are rare to seeing
patients with real problems who have been stereotyped for one reason or
another. Groopman is very specific in coaching prospective patients in how to
overcome some of the associated biases.
This advice centers on the fact that biological systems are complex and
don’t necessarily support logical deductions.
The astute doctor needs to be systematic, evaluate the data for
themselves including the elicitation or more history, and question their first
impressions. The patient aware of these limitations can ask the correct
questions along the way to assist their physician in staying on track. He
advises the patient to express their concern about the worst-case scenario to
get that out there for discussion and to keep their doctor focused. The patient is informed of how their history,
review of systems and exam may need to be repeated along with some tests that
have been previously done. The physician may have to ignore common aphorisms or
maxims that are designed to focus on common problems and consider the complex –
like more than one diagnosis being suggested. Business management of the
medical encounter is seen to impair and obstruct this interactive process.
Groopman’s book is very good both as a guide to patients
and a review for physicians who have been educated in diagnostic thinking. In
the body of the book technical jargon is avoided and the case scenarios
thoroughly explained. There is an excellent list of references and annotations
for each chapter at the end of the book.
How Doctors Think by
Kathryn Montgomery takes the unexpected form of a philosophical argument against
medicine as a science. She qualifies her criticism by being very clear that she
is considering Newtonian or positivist science and not biological
science. She recognizes several features of biological science that make it an
integral part of medicine, but also not at all like the criteria for science
that she sets as the premise for her argument. This is problematic at two
levels. First, deterministic and reductionist physicists like Sabine
Hossenfelder are very clear that everything is reducible to known subatomic
particles and that particles in a brain are deterministic.
“Biology can be reduced to chemistry, chemistry
can be reduced to atomic physics, and atoms are made of elementary particles
like electrons, quarks, and gluons.” (5)
So for at least some scientists – reductionism is not a
problem and the boundaries are not very clear between physical science,
biology, and medicine. Second, it is now
known that biological organisms have a wide array of stochastic mechanisms that
by virtue of their own nature produce apparently random results. With that
range of possibilities, it is not very clear if the standards of physical
science are that much different than the biological science necessary for
medicine.
Montgomery makes the argument about science and the damage
that the idea of medicine as science does to both medicine and its
practitioners at several levels. First,
she describes science in medical training. Medical students encounter the basic
science curriculum in the first two years of medical school. It is not physical
science but biological sciences relevant to understanding pathophysiology,
pharmacology, and epidemiology/evidence-based medicine. She suggests this exposure to science is less
relevant as the student transitions to a clinician with adequate clinical
judgment – almost to the point that the basic science is an afterthought. This
aspect of training is also used to point out that medical students are not
being trained as scientists and the remainder of their formal education is
spent learning clinical judgement. At
places she describes the preclinical years as fairly bleak period of memorization
peripherally related to clinical development.
Second, the uncertainty of biology and medicine is part of her
argument. She extends the argument from
the patient side to the side of the doctor. Patients want and need certainty
and therefore they want doctors who are schooled in the best possible science
who can provide it. Patients want an answer and all they get is statistics. Third,
she suggests that the moral and habitual practice of medicine although
dependent on human biology and the associated technical advances is not really
science. Physicians are taught to
practice medicine and the don’t question “the status of its knowledge” (p.
191). She describes medical practice as a set of rational procedures that are
shared with many other professions in the humanities and social sciences. Fourth, the notion of medicine as a science
is “clinically useful” in that it reassures the patients that physicians are
engaged in a rational process like they were taught in science classes rather
than a contextual, interpretive, narrative process used by non-scientists. She cites numerous examples of maxims and
aphorisms used in medicine to guide this process like Peabody’s famous: “The
secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.”
1: The argument about
medicine not being a physical science – that is a good starting point if
you want to be able to attack the scientific aspects of medicine, but does
anyone really accept that premise? No physical science is taught in the basic
science years of medicine. The basic
sciences are focused on human anatomy and physiology. An associated argument is
that biological sciences have no overriding laws like physics and that is given
as further evidence that medicine is not a science. There is an entire range of
science within the basic science of medicine that cannot be explained by
physical science but it is necessary for clinical medicine and innovation in
medicine. Finally science is a process
that is subject to ongoing verification. That is as true for biological science
as it is for physical sciences. While there appear to not be as many absolutes
for biology progress is undeniable even within the boundaries of medicine.
2: Uncertainty in
biological systems and medicine - the author makes it seem like defining
medicine as a science gives the false impression of certainty. I don’t think
that certainty is misrepresented or minimized in clinical medicine. Every physician I know experiences the
uncertainty during informed consent and prognosis discussions. It is built into
surgical consent forms and in situations involving medical treatment or testing
– the discussions are even more complex. In a typical day, I will advise
patients on side effects that occur at rates varying from 4 out of 10 patients
to 1 out of 50,000 and tell them what to look for and when to call me. I have had patients tell me after those
discussions that they would prefer not to take a medication or do the recommended
testing. I will also discuss life threatening problems with patients, and let
them know I cannot predict outcomes but can advise them on how to reduce risk. The
only way medicine can practiced is by having appropriate informed consent
discussions that fully acknowledge uncertainty and the associated biological
heterogeneity. From the patient side,
everyone has a friend, acquaintance, or family member who was healthy until the
day there were not. The uncertainty of physical health and medical outcomes at
that point are widely known by the general public.
An additional and lesser known aspect of the effect of uncertainty on physician behavior is encouraging the correct answer or treatment as soon as possible. Montgomery attributes some of this to the moral dimension of the physician-patient relationship and doing the right thing for the patient. But a critical part of uncertainty is that physicians eventually learn to project their decisions out into the future. Those projections are all taken into account in developing the current treatment plan. The outcome of an idealized plan can be viewed as the direct result of the uncertainties involved.
3: Physician
detachment is a likely consequence of characterizing medicine as a science –
At points Montgomery makes the point that physician can emotionally protect
themselves by assuming the detached rationality of science. It follows that
abandoning medicine as a science would result in a more realistic emotional connection
with patients. She has a detailed discussion of the physician-patient relationship
being more as a friend or a neighbor.
She concludes that neighborliness has a number of virtues to recommend
it as the relationship for the 21st century. Two concepts from
psychiatry are omitted from this discussion – empathy and boundaries. Empathy
is a technical skill that is typically taught to physicians in their first interviewing
courses in the first year of medical school. It is a technical skill that allows for a more
complete understanding of the patient’s emotional and cognitive predicament. In
my experience what patients are looking for is a physician who understands
them. That is generally not available from a friend or neighbor. The basic boundary issue is that it is very
difficult to provide care to a person who is emotionally involved with the
physician. There are degrees of involvement, but any degree is important. A
physician who is empathic, had a clear awareness of the relevant boundaries,
and has a solid alliance with the patient is far from detached. But I would not see them as neighborly or a
friend. The physicians job is the be in
a position where they can provide the best possible medical advice. That can
only happens from a neutral position where they can give a patient the same
advice they would give anybody else.
That also does not mean that physicians are not emotionally affect when bad
things happen to their patients or when their patients die.
4: Do ancient
Greek concepts still apply? – The author uses Aristotelian definitions of episteme
and phronesis several times throughout the text. Episteme is scientific
reasoning and phronesis is practical reasoning. Aristotle’s view was that since there are no “fixed
and invariable answers” to questions about health, every question must be
considered an individual case. In those
cases, practical reasoning that considers context and additional factors or phronesis
applies. That allows the author to
compare medicine to a number of social science disciplines that use the same
kind of reasoning. The question needs to
be asked: “What would Aristotle conclude today?” In ancient Greece there were basically no
good medical treatments and medical theory was extremely primitive. Over the
intervening centuries medicine has become a lot less imperfect. Uncertainty clearly
exists, but the scientific advances are undeniable. It is possible to say today that there
are now fixed and invariable answers to large populations of people. Medicine has always
been a collection of probability statements – but those probabilities in terms
of successful outcomes have significantly improved. One the corollaries of Aristotle’s work is that there can be “no science
of individuals” and yet the current goal is individualized or personalized medicine.
5: Is science relevant
to clinicians on a day-to-day basis? - I think that it is. I have certainly spent hours and even entire
weekends researching patient related problems to find the best solution to a
problem and to be absolutely sure that my recommended course of treatment would
not harm the patient. All of that reading was basic or clinical science. On the same day that I received Montgomery’s
book, I got my weekly copy of the New England Journal of Medicine. I have been a subscriber since my first year
of medical school based on the recommendation of my biochemistry professor. Our
biochemistry class was designed around research seminars where we read and
critiqued basic science research. There was also the assumption that you were
reading the text cover to cover and attending all of the lectures. He encouraged all of us to keep up on the science
of medicine by continuing to read the NEJM and in retrospect it was a great
idea. In that edition I turned to the
Case records of the MGH (6): An 81-Year-Old Man with Cough, Fever, and
Shortness of Breath. It was a detailed discussion by an Internist about the
presentation and differential diagnosis of the problem. And there on page 2336
was a diagram of the ventilation perfusion mismatch that occurs with a
pulmonary embolism and acute respiratory distress syndrome. I have seen this science
at the bedside in many clinical settings.
The clinical competency of pattern matching, pattern recognition,
and pattern completion is left out of Montgomery’s description of how doctors
think and it is an important omission.
It is a good example of non-verbal and unconscious reasoning that can be
a critical part of the process. The answer to the question: “Is this patient
critically ill?” and the triage that follows depends on it. Pattern matching is also experience dependent
with experts in their respective fields being able to more rapidly diagnose and
classify problems that physicians who are not experts. Biases affecting verbal
reasoning can negatively impact the diagnostic process, but so can the lack of
experience in seeing patterns of illness and an inadequate number of cases in a
particular specialty.
I consider both of these books to be good reads, especially
if you are a physician and have had no exposure to thinking about the
diagnostic process. Both authors have
their own ideas about what occurs and there is a lot of overlap. Both authors
have the goal of stimulating discussion and analysis of how physicians think
and educating the general public about it. Physicians will probably find
Groopman a faster and more relatable text. Physicians may find the references
and vocabulary used in Montgomery to be less recognizable. I would encourage
any physician who is responding to initiatives to change the medical curriculum
or critique it to read Montgomery’s book and work through her criticisms. Both books have excellent references and
annotations listed by the chapter for further reading. Non-physicians
especially patients who are working with physicians on difficult problems may
benefit from Groopman’s tips on how to keep those conversations focused and
relevant. As a psychiatrist who is
sensitive to attacks (even philosophical ones) from many places – you may find
my criticism of Montgomery’s work to be too rigorous. I tried to keep that
criticism down to a level that could be contained in a blog post. I encourage a reading of her book and formulating
your own opinions. It is an excellent scholarly work.
Finally, the area of expertise in medicine and the
associated clinical judgment of experts is still a current research topic. The research has gone from basic experiments
about who can properly diagnose a rash or diabetic retinopathy to a clear look
at brain systems responding during that process. Those changes have occurred
over the past 30 years. At the descriptive level it remains important to be
aware of the possible cognitive biases and what can be done to overcome them.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
References:
1: Groopman J. How Doctors Think. Houghton Mifflin
Company, New York, 2008.
2: Montgomery
K. How Doctors Think. Oxford
University Press, New York, 2006.
3: Kassirer JP, Kopelman
RI. Learning Clinical Reasoning.
Williams and Wilkens, Baltimore, 1991.
4: Sox HC, Blat MA,
Higgins MC, Marton KI. Medical Decision
Making. Butterworths, Boston, 1988.
5: Hossenfelder
S. The End of Reductionism Could Be
Nigh. Or Not. Nautilus June 18,2021
(accessed on June 18, 2021) https://nautil.us/blog/the-end-of-reductionism-could-be-nigh-or-not
6: Hibbert KA,
Goiffon RJ, Fogerty AE. Case 18-2021: An 81-Year-Old Man with Cough, Fever, and
Shortness of Breath. N Engl J Med. 2021 Jun 17;384(24):2332-2340. doi:
10.1056/NEJMcpc2100283. PMID: 34133863.
Monday, May 31, 2021
The Current Moral Crisis In The United States
It is fashionable these days to talk about moral crises that really aren’t moral crises. The level of rhetoric is at the point where disagreements can be spun as moral crises, while people are dying in the streets. The best examples I can think of are the long-standing epidemics of gun violence and racism. New examples are cropping up every day. There are current trends in violence against Asian Americans and Jews against the backdrop of long-standing trends. Discrimination and violence against black Americans is finally acknowledged as being widespread and is the basis of an activist civil movement and hopefully systematic reforms.
All of the statistics to back up my statements in the first
paragraph are easily available and I am not going to post all those references
here. Since I started writing this blog one of my concerns has been gun
violence and how to stop it given the level of interference with common sense
gun law reforms by one of the major parties and major lobbying concerns. I saw
the attempt to counter that political interference as being futile and focused
more on public health interventions and possible psychiatric intervention. The latest good review of that approach is available in a review by Knoll and Pies (3). For
many years I have advocated that homicidal ideation should be seen as a public
health intervention point and that it should be part of the strong public
health message. To this day nothing has happened. Public
health organizations do have research-based suggestions such as locking up
firearms and common-sense gun laws like banning large capacity magazines,
banning assault rifles, and universal background checks, but the general lack
of progress in that area is not reassuring. There has been some movement in
allowing more research on gun violence, an area that was previously blocked by
gun lobbyists.
What is the connection between gun violence, racism, and
violence toward our fellow Americans? I think there are all based on the same
interpersonal dynamic. That dynamic is seeing another person as being significantly
different from you, attributing negative characteristics to them, and using
both of those premises for treating them different from you up to and including
perpetrating violence toward them. In
psychiatric jargon, we use the term projection to capture this process or
in the extreme projective identification. These are not psychiatric
diagnoses, but defense mechanisms that are distributed across the population
even though they may be more likely in people with specific psychiatric
diagnoses.
In my readings over the years I have been looking for a
likely origin or at least first sign of this kind of thought pattern. In other words,
have people been thinking like this since the beginning of recorded time, or is this
a new phenomenon? In the course of that reading,
I came across a book written by the anthropologist Lawrence Keeley called War
Before Civilization. In this book, Keeley explores the idea of the noble
savage from prehistoric times. In
other words, were pre-historic people inherently peaceful as some had suggested
or were there early signs of violence and aggression. A review of the evidence
suggests that the majority of human prehistoric civilizations engaged in
frequent warfare and total warfare – in other words attacks not limited to
combatants and decimating the opposition’s infrastructure and ability to make
war. Keeley reviews the motivations and
consequences of primitive warfare in great detail including tactics (surprise
attacks, slaughter of noncombatants, and general massacres) and specific practices
like mutilating dead bodies. There is clear evidence the latter functioned in
part to dehumanize and humiliate the enemy and send a message to the survivors.
These dynamics were not limited to prehistoric man and have continued through
modern times and modern warfare.
A recent report referencing Keeley’s book appeared on Scientific
Reports (2) this week. It was a
reanalysis of a Nile Valley burial site of 61 people from about 13,400 years
ago. It is thought to be some of the earliest evidence of Homo sapiens interpersonal
violence. In that analysis over 100
lesions were identified in the skeletal remains from what appeared to be
projectile weapons. Examining the
mortality curve of the individuals in the cemetery showed that it was
consistent with multiple burials rather than a single event. The stone artifacts examined were consistent
with spear or arrow heads. Some we designed to kill by lacerating and causing blood loss. Some were discovered embedded in bones, but others
were discovered within the area where the body was discovered and that was
viewed as being consistent with the ability to penetrate the body. The authors conclude that the majority of people
in the cemetery died of blunt or sharp force trauma and that there were
multiple episodes of interpersonal violence.
Some of the combatants had been wounded multiple times prior to
death. They also concluded that these
episodes were most likely the result of “skirmishes, raids or ambushes” likely
related to territorial disputes that may have been affected by the weather. (p.
9).
What can be inferred from this long history of human
violence and aggression? First, groups of humans have been perpetrating violence
against one another since prehistoric times. Second, during these episodes total
warfare was very common and the human cost of war is always high. The estimated
percentages of deaths in ancient society were generally higher than in modern
society for a number of reasons. That was not a deterrent to ancient humans. Third, the psychological states during these
episodes of violence show a potentially broad range of thinking leading to aggression. Very limited incidents such as the theft of
livestock or a rumor of a sexual affair between members of different tribes or villages may be all that was required to start a series of retaliations leading
to all out war. Once a violent conflict
ensued – there were thought patterns and rituals in place to justify the
killing, prevent bad outcomes for the killers, humiliate the dead, and
embarrass their families.
The current moral crisis in America seems to have a direct
link with prehistoric behaviors. It is enacted by aggressive behavior that is
described as racism, antisemitism, and gun violence, but the dynamic is the
same one described in ancient man. In
other words, once a person can be seen and characterized as an enemy (for whatever
reason), it is very easy to vilify them,
attribute the worst possible motivations to them, and use that as a basis for
rationalizing aggressive behavior. In the past weeks, I saw two elderly Asian
American women attacked at a bus stop by a man wielding a knife. The attack as
so violent that the large blade of the weapon broke off inside the body of one
of these women. In a more recent event, a heavily armed long time employee shot
9 of his coworkers and then killed himself when he was surrounded by police. In both cases, the “motivation” for the
violent behavior is unknown. There is a
suggestion of mental illness, but the majority of people with diagnosed mental
illnesses and even the same diagnoses are not violent or aggressive. The sheer
volume of mass shootings in the United States suggests it is more of a cultural
phenomenon here than anywhere else but that is confounded by the easy
availability of firearms. The main difference between modern and ancient times is that we have a societal structure that is designed to contain violence and aggression and prevent larger outbreaks. It is clearly ineffective at this point in preventing violence.
I am suggesting a common thought process here that does not
require any psychiatric diagnosis and one that can be intervened upon and self-monitored. In order to perpetrate discrimination, hate
crimes, and even homicidal violence toward others 3 conditions have to
exist. First, the potential victims of
violence need to be seen as sufficiently different from the perpetrator so that
he can attribute unrealistic negative attributes to them and rationalize his aggressive action. Second, the attacker can see himself
as sufficiently different from the potential victims that he feels threatened
by them and can rationalize attacking them for that reason alone. A common example is that the attacker feels
victimized by his coworkers and feels the need to strike out at them. And finally, the attacker must have a plan to
either seriously injure or kill the victim(s). All of these thought patterns can
be considered derivative of thoughts present in ancient man leading to the wide
ranging aggression and warfare described in the references.
I think there is much to be said for intervention based on
the observations in this post. For the
time I have written this blog, I have advocated for intervention based on homicidal
or aggressive behavior. When I worked as an acute care psychiatrist – treating
violence and aggression was easily half of my job. If we can suggest that persons with suicidal
ideation or self-injurious behavior contact a crisis intervention service or
hotline – why don’t we have a similar suggestion for people with homicidal
thinking? And further what about general
education about the primitive origins of these thought patterns. Just the other day I posted the following:
“Ridiculing people who died of C-19 and were
antivaxxers and anti-maskers is bad form - plain and simple.
Bring civility back and restart civilization.
It starts with recognizing the value of a
single human life.”
There was much agreement with the post, but also several
people who suggested that I was naïve for not being able to recognize enemies
or that I was a “better person” for being able to overlook the behaviors of a
group of people who were potentially dangerous to others. My post was not about moral superiority or not
recognizing enemies – it is all about the fact that disagreement should not
lead to enmity and beyond that we are all members of the same tribe. We all came from Africa. And seeing
differences between us that do not exist is probably ancient thinking that obscures
the fact that we are all a lot more similar than we are different. As I explained to some of the critics of my post, they seemed to be focused on the exceptions rather than the rule. They also seemed to be making arbitrary exceptions based on seeing more differences than similarities.
We are currently at a crossroads in this country. People are making money and generating political capital by emphasizing differences and exploiting the primitive thinking that I have outlined in this post. Much of the aggression plays out at a symbolic level in social media, but the Insurrection at the Capitol building and the increasing levels of physical violence illustrates that it is far from always symbolic. Americans have traditionally left ethics and morality up to religious institutions where it may be presented at an abstract level.
It is time to get back to the basic premise of why every person is unique and needs to be treated with respect by virtue of being a member of the human race. It seems like an obvious but untested approach to reducing interpersonal violence at all levels in a society that is not currently equipped to prevent it.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
References:
1: Lawrence H.
Keeley. War
Before Civilization. Oxford University Press, 1997.
2: Crevecoeur I,
Dias-Meirinho MH, Zazzo A, Antoine D, Bon F. New insights on interpersonal
violence in the Late Pleistocene based on the Nile valley cemetery of Jebel
Sahaba. Sci Rep. 2021 May 27;11(1):9991. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-89386-y. PMID:
34045477 (Open Access).
3: Knoll JD, Pies RW. Moving Beyond "Motives" in Mass Shootings. Psychiatric Times 36(1) Jan 13, 2019. Link
Permissions: Graphic above is from reference 2 per the following Creative Commons license.
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to theCreative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http:// creative commons. org/ licenses/ by/4. 0/.