Type 5 diabetes mellitus – where did that come from?

27th May 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Classification of diabetes mellitus

We know about type 1 to type 3 diabetes mellitus. I didn’t know that there was a type 4 and now they tell us there is a type 5. For someone who has a special interest in things diabetes, this is definitely news to me. Actually, on further research, it’s actually not that new.…

Reducing LDL-C for brain health – how low do we need to go?

27th April 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

how low should LDL-C be?

We recently looked at the LDL-C levels needed to stabilise plaque progression and the LDL-C levels needed to cause plaque regression. Plaque stabilisation and regression leads to reduction in cardiovascular events. Dyslipidaemia (especially LDL-C) is also associated with cognitive impairment and dementia and reducing those numbers with statin therapy reduces the risk.…

Prescribing exercise in T2D – when is a good time?

13th April 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) was first shown to be beneficial in the management of patients with type 1 diabetes. Later on, patients with type 2 diabetes on insulin also found CGM beneficial in more ways than one. Of course, patients with T2D not on insulin also found CGM beneficial. What else can we use CGM for?…

Uterine fibroids – diagnosis and management

12th April 2025, NIA Diagnostic Imaging

Uterine fibroids, also referred to as leiomyomas, are the most prevalent benign tumors in women of reproductive age, originating from smooth muscle cells in the uterus (myometrium) (1). While benign, uterine fibroids can greatly affect a woman’s daily quality of life (4). Ultrasound is the first-line modality used for diagnosing and characterising these fibroids (5).…

Vulnerable coronary artery plaque – what does it look like?

30th March 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Atherosclerotic plaque

While invasive coronary angiogram is still the gold standard in deciding whether revascularisation is indicated, invasive coronary angiogram has its limitations. That’s why intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) was invented. Well, it’s been 25-30 years since then and we have yet to have IVUS widely available for clinical use. We have additional miniaturised imaging techniques (see below later) since then and they are also not in clinical use as such.…

Oral glucose tolerance testing – is carb loading still necessary?

23rd March 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

carb loading or not

I thought I read somewhere many years ago that we don’t have to advocate the traditional 72-hour carbohydrate (carb) loading prior to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). I have not heard that issue being brought up of late. Well, does it increase or decrease the glucose levels of the OGTT.…

Plantar fasciitis – management in general practice

14th March 2025, NIA Diagnostic Imaging

Plantar fasciitiis

Plantar Fasciitis is the most common cause of heel pain in adults affecting about 10% of the adult population. It is most common in women aged between 40-60 years. It stems from the degenerative irritation of the plantar fascia origin at the medial calcaneal tuberosity of the heel and its surrounding perifascial structures.…

Colchicine to reduce CV events – who needs them?

14th March 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Colchicine or not?

First it’s good then it’s not. We explored the role of colchicine in reducing cardiovascular disease (CVD) back in May 2024 when we looked at the LoDoCo2 trial. At the time, it was hailed as a significant development and colchicine made it into a couple of cardiology guidelines shortly after. Well, a couple of trials later, they are not so sure anymore.…

Do anti-depressants hasten cognitive decline in dementia?

28th February 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Dementia

Every so often you come across a study where the initial and immediate impression is that there must be more to the conclusion. The latest study which connects the use of anti-depressants with further cognitive decline in patients with dementia is just one of those studies. Now, many patients who have dementia also have depression and are on anti-depressants and we don’t think twice about whether the drugs might hasten the decline in cognitive function in these patients.…

GLP1-RA and thyroid cancers – is there a signal here?

24th February 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

thyroid cancers

This is one of the most common questions asked at glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP1-RA) CPD meetings. “What about the risk of thyroid cancer, doc?” As usual, the evidence is rather conflicting. The worry about the thyroid cancer risk with GLP1-RA is actually not without justification. The hypotheses is actually biologically plausible.…

Paediatric hydronephrosis – the role of ultrasound

NIA Diagnostic Imaging, 11th February 2025

Hydronephrosis

Renal pathology in children is always difficult to diagnose. It depends on a high index of suspicion. Family history of renal pathology may offer some clues. Confirmed urinary tract infection (UTI) warrant further investigations. We need a reliable radiology provider to tell us whether there is any pathology we need to follow up. NIA Diagnostic Imaging offers high-resolution ultrasound imaging using GE LOGIC E10 systems to effectively demonstrate renal, bladder anatomy and other pathology that may be the cause of hydronephrosis.…

Preventing future CV risks in women – let’s concentrate on pregnancy related disorders

10th February 2025, A/Prof Chee L Khoo

Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes?

We perform cardiovascular (CV) risk assessments in our consulting rooms everyday. We assess lipid profiles, smoking history, family history and activity levels in our patients routinely and try to quantify the likelihood they may have a cardiovascular event. Over the years at GPVoice we have tried to expand beyond the traditional risk factors as more data come to hand.…