🩺 Record Detail

Patient Info

Name: Unknown
Age: Unknown
Date: 2025-08-08 05:30:06

Transcript

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                                             <tbody><tr><td id="fragmentid_1"><div><p><strong class="Doctor">Doctor</strong>: Good morning, Mrs. Sharma. It's good to see you again. How have you been feeling since our last session?</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_2"><div><p><strong class="Patient">Patient</strong>: Good morning, doctor. Honestly, not great. The pain in my left hand has gotten worse. It's sharp, constant, and sometimes it feels like it's burning from the inside. And I don't know how to say this. I've started seeing things that aren't there.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_3"><div><p><strong class="Doctor">Doctor</strong>: I'm really sorry to hear that. Let's take things one at a time. About the hand pain that's likely due to nerve involvement from the cancer spreading. I'll adjust your pain medication and add a nerve pain reliever. Something like gabapentin may help ease that burning sensation.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_4"><div><p><strong class="Patient">Patient</strong>: Thank you. That pain has been unbearable at times.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_5"><div><p><strong class="Doctor">Doctor</strong>: I can imagine. Now, about the hallucinations are you seeing or hearing things? And how often does it happen?</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_6"><div><p><strong class="Patient">Patient</strong>: Mostly at night. I sometimes see people in my room or hear voices calling my name. I know they're not real, but it's terrifying.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_7"><div><p><strong class="Doctor">Doctor</strong>: That sounds distressing. It could be a side effect of the hydrosopioids or just the progression of the illness. I'll refer you to our palliative care psychiatrist. Meanwhile, I'll reduce your opioid slightly and introduce a low dose of halopiridol. It should help manage the hallucinations.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_8"><div><p><strong class="Patient">Patient</strong>: Thank you, doctor. It's just been so hard. I feel like I'm losing control.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_9"><div><p><strong class="Doctor">Doctor</strong>: You're not alone, Mrs. Sharma. We're here to support you every step of the way. We'll keep monitoring and adjusting things to give you as much comfort and peace as possible.</p></div></td></tr><tr><td id="fragmentid_10"><div><p><strong class="Patient">Patient</strong>: I'm grateful for that, really.</p></div></td></tr></tbody>

Clinical Notes

Subjective

  • Patient: Mrs. Sharma.

  • Primary Concern:

    • Experiencing worsening pain in the left hand, described as sharp, constant, and sometimes burning.
    • Reports visual and auditory hallucinations, mostly occurring at night, seeing people in the room and hearing voices.
  • Psychosocial Stressors:

    • Expresses feeling like losing control and finding the situation hard.

Objective

  • Medical History:

    • Likely nerve involvement from cancer spreading.
    • Currently on hydrosopioids.
  • Behavioral Observations:

    • Patient expresses distress and fear related to hallucinations.

Assessment

  1. Pain Management:

    • Adjust pain medication and add a nerve pain reliever, such as gabapentin.
  2. Hallucinations:

    • Likely a side effect of hydrosopioids or disease progression.
    • Referral to palliative care psychiatrist.
    • Reduce opioid slightly and introduce halopiridol to manage hallucinations.

Plan

  1. Medication Adjustment:

    • Continue monitoring and adjusting medications for comfort and symptom management.
  2. Psychiatric Referral:

    • Referral to palliative care psychiatrist for further evaluation and management.
  3. Support:

    • Reassurance of continuous support and monitoring throughout the treatment process.
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