General Medical issues thread

I turn 65 in Feb and I'm going to book in for my shangrix straight away.
I've had shingles once and I never want them again ! (Ha, ha, auto correct keeps changing shingrix to shangri-la. )
 
Shangri-La hotels are very nice and shingles is the opposite of that.
My mother got shingles around her eyes and it was nasty. We paid for our two shots in Los Angeles several years ago. I think it cost $280 USD per person and I cannot remember if the second shot was a further $280 USD 6 months later.
 
Shangri-La hotels are very nice and shingles is the opposite of that.
My mother got shingles around her eyes and it was nasty. We paid for our two shots in Los Angeles several years ago. I think it cost $280 USD per person and I cannot remember if the second shot was a further $280 USD 6 months later.
It's truly awful and the pain recurs for months. Well mine did.
I was lucky and got the antivirals early, but I'd hate to have a full-blown dose.
 
And watching one of those medico programmes on Netflix they just doscussed the anion gap. What are the chances of that after 8 years of blood tests and never doscussed the anion gap before.
Actually very high chance with most people walking around that have many blood tests will never have a discussion re the Anion Gap as usually it is "normal".
Here is a discussion of it. And note it has CATMUDPILES which we learnt doing Respiratory Medicine.

 
Actually very high chance with most people walking around that have many blood tests will never have a discussion re the Anion Gap as usually it is "normal".
Here is a discussion of it. And note it has CATMUDPILES which we learnt doing Respiratory Medicine.

Thanks. Mine seems to range between 15 and 17 over the last 18 months of monthly tests. 17 being 'upper limit'.
 
If bothanion and osmolar gap elevated then it's alcohol poisoning - ethanol/methanol or antifreeze poisoning. Metabolic acidosis generally also occurs which is part of the anion gap so it's also suspected - in these cases it's going to be bad.


However if anion gap alone, then suspect methanol but never forget diabetic ketoacidosis or (other metabolic acidosis)

Anion gap calculator.
Change units from mEq/L to mol/L
The menu at top lists the differentials including MUDPILERS and HARDUPS etc
Never seen albumin used in Anion Gap - normally Na K Cl HCO3
 
Never seen albumin used in Anion Gap - normally Na K Cl HCO3

K often not used but Albumin is definitely used as a correcting factor under some circumstances

Albumin is the greatest "source" of un- measured anions in the blood under normal conditions. Most of the normal AG is due to albumin. There is a correcting formula for it. Observed AG needs to be corrected especially in cases of abnormal albumin.

But yes in an otherwise healthy person who comes into emergency with symptoms of poisoning, albumin correction would be irrelevant. Where it makes a difference is a patient who is in ICU with low albumin due to illness/malnutrition who has a "normal AG" but once corrected for low albumin actually has a high anion gap.

Edit you can see how albumin is used in the "evidence" section of the MDCalc
 
Last edited:
I think I slept through MUDPILES in med school but your explanation resulted in some creaky turning of a few cogs in my brain @k_sheep !😂
You and me both ... I had regrets when I sat my fellowship exams and had to learn it all for that!!
Actually very high chance with most people walking around that have many blood tests will never have a discussion re the Anion Gap as usually it is "normal".
Here is a discussion of it. And note it has CATMUDPILES which we learnt doing Respiratory Medicine.

Man there's 3 more since I was a trainee? I'm too old for this!

(straight off the bat of sitting an exam today for a post fellowship scope of practice extension....)

I find medicine is often like that.... you never think about something or see it, then you see it 3 times in a week. This week is apparently anion gap week.
 
Read our AFF credit card guides and start earning more points now.

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

This week is apparently anion gap week.
The week just gone has been Ozempic/Wegovy Week.
Latest recommendation is to stop these meds including Mounjaro for minimum 3 weeks to 4weeks before any elective surgery.

Lots of patients not telling us they are on Ozempic etc unless you ask specifically.
 
Last edited:
Son has only just been able to fill his Ozempic script again as chemists in the area were out of stock and couldn't say when they would get more. His doctor changed him onto another drug to complement the one he has as well as Ozemic and then when the chemist rang this week he is back on the O again. Was about 2-3 weeks.
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.

Staff online

  • NM
    Enthusiast
Back
Top