Pabaid
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MCMargaret Chen58F · SAMPLE-01
Hypertension follow-up; morning headaches
Ambient scribe · soon
Visit Note
From chart data · openrouter/google/gemini-2.5-flash-lite
Subjective

Hypertension follow-up; morning headaches

58F. Home BP readings in the 150s/90s over the past two weeks, with morning headaches. New right-knee pain for ~3 weeks, worse going up stairs; denies trauma or swelling.

Objective
BP 152/94 mmHg
HR 78 bpm
No exam findings were recorded this visit. Pabaid leaves the exam blank rather than inserting a normal template.
Assessment
Essential (primary) hypertensionI10
Right knee pain, likely osteoarthritisM25.561
Plan
Recheck potassium and creatinine in 2 weeks.
Continue Lisinopril 200 mg PO daily.
Continue Amoxicillin 500 mg PO TID.
Dose check · Lisinopril
Lisinopril ~200 mg/day is above the reference maximum of 80 mg/day — consider confirming the intended dose.
Lisinopril — maximum daily dose — FDA label (DailyMed)
Allergy conflict · Amoxicillin
Amoxicillin belongs to penicillin-class antibiotics, which matches the recorded allergy "penicillin" — consider an alternative or confirming tolerance. Recorded allergy: penicillin (this visit).
Basis: Amoxicillin is a member of penicillin-class antibiotics; the recorded allergy maps to that class
Draft — not signed. Exported copies are watermarked DRAFT.
Surfaced for you · Hypertensioncited from library
First-line management
  • Thiazide, ACE-i / ARB, or CCB first-line (ACC/AHA 2017).
  • Target <130/80 mmHg for most adults.
  • Reassess 2–4 wks after a dose change; monitor K⁺/creatinine on ACE-i or ARB.
ACC/AHA 2017JNC8cited from library
Surfaced for you · Knee osteoarthritiscited from library
First-line management
  • Exercise therapy and weight management are first-line for all patients.
  • Topical NSAIDs before oral NSAIDs; acetaminophen has modest benefit.
  • X-ray only if diagnosis unclear or symptoms persist despite therapy.
ACR 2019AAOScited from library
Regional patterns · United StatesCMS Medicare Part D, 2023
Hypertension — what peers commonly prescribe
  • Lisinopril and amlodipine are consistently among the most-dispensed antihypertensives in Medicare Part D.
  • Losartan leads ARBs; hydrochlorothiazide remains the most common thiazide.
  • Metoprolol is the most-dispensed beta blocker (often for co-existing indications).
CMS Medicare Part D, 2023descriptive — not a recommendation
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