the benzodiazepine bonanza
TRANSCRIPT
964
of us, more accustomed to performing in a system withfirearm and high-velocity highway hazards, found his
capabilities frequently exceeded by the hidden steps,low ceilings, and slanted floors characterising some charm-ing London shops. While the injuries thus incurred wereminor, they point to a remediable source of more severeinjuries among those with even greater performancedecrements. The clumsy, frail, and intoxicated, like thepoor, will be with us always. Would it not be in the besttradition of preventive medicine to provide them safe
passage ?School of Hygiene and Public
Health,Johns Hopkins University,Baltimore, Maryland 21205.
U.S.A.
PARK ELLIOTT DIETZSUSAN P. BAKER.
THE BENZODIAZEPINE BONANZA
SIR,-Dr Tyrer is certainly right to draw attention to themultiplicity of benzodiazepines (Sept. 21, p. 709). Not
only are there too many, but one suspects that they are toooften prescribed in ways which cause harm to the patient.
In the past three months I have seen 3 patients who wereall receiving over 50 mg. of diazepam daily and had beendoing so for several months. They were all young womenof unstable personalities who had shown no improvementin their behaviour while on diazepam: if anything, suicideattempts had increased. If not physically dependent theywere emotionally dependent on the drug to the extent thatthey would apply great pressure to obtain further supplies,including threatening suicide. I have not read of anyevidence that diazepam is more effective in doses over
.- 30 mg. daily, and my own impression is that it is of muchgreater benefit when given for short courses lasting a
maximum of 2-3 weeks.
Perhaps more useful than this is to allow a patient tokeep a small supply of diazepam to take at times of anxiety,but not as a regular prescription, and under these circum-stances patients usually reduce their intake to perhaps threetablets a week, and by avoiding tolerance, gain the maxi-mum benefit.
Department of Psychiatry,St. George’s Hospital Medical School,
Blackshaw Road,London SW17. JOHN M. KELLETT.
SERUM-MURAMIDASE IN LEUKÆMICRETICULOENDOTHELIOSIS
SiR,—The cell line of origin of the abnormal mono-nuclear cells of leukxmic reticuloendotheliosis (hairy-cellleukxmia) has been argued. I read with interest the
scanning-electron-microscope study by Dr Schnitzer andDr Hammack (Sept. 14, p. 649) of cells from patients withthis disorder. They interpret their findings as supportingthe view that the cells are lymphocytes, and they refer tothe opposing evidence for a lymphocytic versus mono-nuclear-phagocytic cell line of origin.Muramidase is a low-molecular-weight enzyme contained
in various mammalian tissue. Of the hxmatopoietic cells,only monocytes and granulocytes contain the enzyme. Theserum levels of muramidase are usually raised in prolifera-tive diseases of monocytes or granulocytes, and normal ordecreased in those of lymphocytes. 1 Previous reportsincluded determinations of that enzyme in the serum of
only a few persons with leukaemic reticuloendotheliosis.2,3We have now performed the spectrophotometric assay on
1. Hansen, N. E. Ser. hœmat. 1974, 7, 70.2. Catovsky, D., Pettit, J. E., Galton, D. A. G., Spiers, A. S. D.,
Harrison, C. V. Br. J. Hœmat. 1974, 26, 9.3. Burns, C. P., Maca, R. D., Hoak, J. C. Cancer Res. 1973, 33, 1615.
Serum-muramidase of patients with leukaemic reticuloendo-theliosis (L.R.E.) and normal subjects (N).
the serum of 13 such patients. The values are decreased
(p < 0-001) compared with normal subjects (see accompany-ing figure). These observations add further evidence thatthe disease should be included in the broad category of
lymphoproliferative diseases, or at least that the abnormalcells are hybrids with many characteristics of lymphocytes.Department of Medicine,University Hospitals,
Iowa City, Iowa 52242,U.S.A. C. PATRICK BURNS.
TWINNING AND NEURAL-TUBE DEFECTS
SIR,-We have examined relationships between twinningand neural-tube closure defects in a series of 1560 casesof anencephaly, encephalocele, and meningomyelocele(A.S.B.) born in New South Wales, Australia, during thenine years 1965-73. We noted during 1950-73 a decliningtrend in rates for anencephaly and twins. Elwood hasdescribed similar trends in Canadian and U.S. data.
In N.S.W. the A.S.B. incidence was 2 per 1000 births;average twinning-rates were 10-74 cases per 1000 births.The observed rate of recurrence after a first child with
meningomyelocele is 5-5%.35 twin pairs were identified among index cases with
A.S.B.; 24 were like-sexed (7 male, 17 female). Zygositywas assigned from recorded evidence of chorion status
thus: 18 dizygotic (D.z.), 14 monozygotic (M.z.), 3 notrecorded.These findings confirm previous observations. There
were 4 instances of concordance, all among like-sexedtwins, thus :1970 M.z. Male Both meningomyelocele (both died)1966 mt.z. Female Both encephalocele (one survivor)1970 M.z. Female One anencephaly, other meningomyelo-
cele (both died)1968 D.z. Female One anencephaly, other meningomyelo-
cele (both died)In addition we have records from outside the survey
period:1963 M.z. Female Both meningomyelocele (both survived)1961 anencephaly, 2 normal (all died)triplets
It appears that concordance is associated with mono-zygosity, by contrast to the preponderance of D.z. pairscontaining only one affected twin. However, relativefrequencies of each twin class (M.z. 21-4%, D.z. 5-5%) are
1. Elwood, P. Lancet, 1974, i, 31.2. Yen, S., MacMahon, B. ibid. 1968, ii, 623.