Comprehensive Adult Care

Internal Medicine

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Internal Medicine

From routine check-ups to chronic disease management, our experienced internists at NRS Hospital are here to guide you every step of the way. Personalized care, advanced facilities, and 24×7 support your health has never been in better hands.

Internal Medicine Treatment

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. “As an MD Medicine specialist, how will you coordinate my care if I need cardiology/nephrology/neurology etc.?”

“I will be your central doctor. I will first assess your full history, examination and reports, make a provisional diagnosis, and start the basic medical management. If I see that you need a super‑specialist (for example cardiologist, nephrologist, neurologist), I will refer you with a clear summary, and later integrate their advice with your overall treatment so that your medicines and follow‑up remain coordinated.”

2. “Can you be my main doctor for diabetes, BP and cholesterol and refer me to superspecialists only when needed?”

“Yes. As an MD in General Medicine, my role is to manage long‑term conditions like diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol, thyroid, obesity and metabolic syndrome. I will monitor your reports, adjust medicines, and guide lifestyle changes. I will send you to a cardiologist, nephrologist, or endocrinologist only when there are complications or special procedures required.”

3. “Are my different problems (BP, sugar, kidney, heart) connected to one main disease, or separate issues?”

“Many of these are interconnected. High BP and uncontrolled sugar can damage the heart, kidneys, brain and blood vessels. I will review all your problems together, identify the common underlying causes (for example, long‑standing diabetes or hypertension), and plan a combined treatment so that one disease’s treatment does not worsen another.”

4. “Can you review all my old prescriptions and tell me which medicines are really required now?”

“Yes. Bring all your previous prescriptions, lab reports, and current tablets. I will check for duplications, unnecessary drugs, or unsafe combinations, and then simplify your prescription to the minimum effective and evidence‑based medicines you need at present.”

5. “If I go to multiple specialists, can you help me avoid duplicate or conflicting medicines?”

“This is an important part of my work. Different specialists may focus on their own organ system and sometimes prescribe overlapping medicines. I will cross‑check doses, interactions and repetitions, then adjust the plan so that all your medicines work together safely without unnecessary duplication.”

6. “What vaccinations, screenings or preventive checks (ECG, sugar, lipids, etc.) should I do at my age?”

“Based on your age, gender and risk factors, I will suggest appropriate preventive care: routine blood pressure, fasting sugar, HbA1c, lipid profile; kidney and liver tests when indicated; ECG and possibly echocardiography or stress tests if risk is high; as well as adult vaccines like flu, pneumococcal, hepatitis, tetanus booster, and others when needed. This helps us detect disease early and prevent complications.”

7. “What is my overall risk for heart attack or stroke, and how can we reduce it over the next 5–10 years?”

“We can estimate your risk by looking at BP, sugar, cholesterol, weight, smoking status, family history and existing organ damage. Based on this, we decide how aggressively to control BP, sugar and lipids, whether you need aspirin or other preventive medicines, and what lifestyle targets you should follow (diet, exercise, weight, smoking cessation). The aim is to lower your 5–10‑year risk of heart attack and stroke as much as possible.”