PROLAPSING POSTERIOR CUSP OF THE MITRAL VALVE

PROLAPSING POSTERIOR CUSP OF THE MITRAL VALVE

1122 obtain a medical education. We wondered any of your readers may be able to advise further course of action we might take. any possible ates wis...

150KB Sizes 0 Downloads 82 Views

1122 obtain a medical education. We wondered any of your readers may be able to advise further course of action we might take. any possible

ates

wishing

whether you on

to

or

St. Cuthbert’s Society, University of Durham, 12 South Bailey, Durham City, Co. Durham.

C. RAMSEY N. REILLY.

Fig. 2-Case 2. E.C.G. recording (lead I) during chest-pounding 32 hours after death.

*** Local education authorities

have

a

discretionary

power to assist graduates with grants towards second degrees, but, very properly, their first duty is to support

and medicine is a five-year course. If the National Health Service or medical research or teaching can benefit by being able to draw on doctors with a science background more thorough than an intercalated, usually biological, B.SC., then the Departments of Health and of Education and Science should want to provide support where local education authorities cannot. However, the Department of Health can suggest no course of action which might help our two correspondents or those with a similar ambition.-ED. L.

non-graduates;

Fig. 3-Case 2. E.C.G. recording (lead I) during chest-pounding 32 hours after death and removal of the heart.

depolarisation of the myocardium and thus can be dangerously misleading. If adequate circulation is not obtained, cardiac massage is mandatory. My observations raise the questions: how and where do these complexes arise ? Further electrophysiological and haemodynamic inquiries are

in progress.

Medical Department, Rogaland Hospital, 4000

Stavanger, Norway.

KAARE SKAALAND.

PROLAPSING POSTERIOR CUSP OF THE MITRAL VALVE SIR,-We have lately assessed three unrelated cases of this condition,1-4 diagnosed on a clinical basis. Cardiac .screening has shown abnormal atrial and atrioventricular

junctional pulsation of what seems to be a consistent and ,abnormal type, differing from the usual pulsation associated with mitral incompetence. One case progressed to true mitral incompetence and lost the earlier type of pulsation. We are wondering whether this feature has been assessed accurately, using electronic scanning equipment, because it seems a useful finding in supporting the clinical diagnosis of this condition. Southland Hospital,

Kew,

Invercargill,

New Zealand.

A. P. POOLE N. R. JEFFERSON.

MEDICAL EDUCATION FOR SCIENCE GRADUATES

SIR,-We are in our third year at Durham University reading honours chemistry and biology, respectively. We both wish to go on to study medicine but are experiencing difficulty in obtaining financial support. Approaches to our local education authorities have to date met with very little success. One of us received an immediate and absolute refusal of financial aid, while the other was informed that the situation was unpromising and that in any event a full grant would be most unlikely. It seems to be general policy of local education authorities not to give financial support for second degrees, even in medicine. Undaunted, we have approached several scientific foundations and similar bodies, but have again been disappointed. Last year5 you drew attention to a proposal, made by a group of clinical biochemists, that the Department of Health might provide financial support for science gradu-

4.

Barlow, J. B. J. chron. Dis. 1965, 18, 665. Barlow, J. B., Bosman, C. K. Am. Heart J. 1966, 71, 166. Barlow, J. B., Pocock, W. A., Marchand, P., Denny, M. ibid. 1963, 66, 443. Stannard, M., Sloman, J. G., Hare, W. S. C., Goble, A. J. Br. med. J.

5.

1967, iii, 71. Lancet, 1971, ii, 966.

1. 2. 3.

GAMMA-GLUTAMYL TRANSPEPTIDASE IN ALCOHOLISM

SIR,-Dr. Rosalki and his colleaguesdrew attention to their finding that patients receiving long-term anticonvulsant therapy had raised serum activities of the hepatic microsomal enzyme, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (G.G.T.P.). Dr. I dec and others2 reported iindings which showed that barbiturates and ethanol can both induce synthesis of this enzyme in rat’s liver, though, during the rather short duration of their experiments, no rise was noted in. the levels of serum-G.G.T.P. However, high 3 serum levels of this enzyme have been found in alcoholism, and such increases could be due to hepatic damage or, possibly, to enzyme induction caused by ethanol. They could also have resulted from induction of enzyme synthesis by barbiturates, habitually taken as hypnotics by many alcoholics, or by anticonvulsants given therapeutically for a short period only, to cover withdrawal of alcohol. We were impressed by Dr. Rosalki’s findings of raised serum-G.G.T.P. levels in alcoholic patients treated by one of us (M. M. G.) elsewhere,3 and have applied the method he described to the examination of patients admitted to the regional alcoholism unit at this hospital. We have found, from estimations made on serial samples collected from 12 male alcoholics, that administration of chlormethiazole and phenytoin for up to seven days only, to cover the immediate period of alcohol withdrawal, does not result in an increase in the level of serum-G.G.T.P. However, in a consecutive series of 30 male patients who had been taking alcohol until admission, 24 (80%) were found to have raised levels of serum-G.G.T.P., ranging from 70 to 1020 units, at that time. (Normal males: less than 60 international units per 1. at 37 °C.) Of the patients with raised levels, 20 (83%) gave no history of taking barbiturates or similar compounds during the previous few weeks, though many had occasionally taken some other drug, most commonly

nitrazepam, chlordiazepoxide,

or

diazepam.

However,

results obtained by us make it unlikely that these other drugs cause elevation of the serum-G.G.T.P. level. Of 143 patients admitted to general psychiatric wards at this hospital, initially for reasons other than an alcoholic complaint, only 16 were found to have raised levels of this enzyme, and 12 of these gave a history of recent continuous use of alcohol or barbiturates. The 127 with 1. 2. 3.

Rosalki, S. B., Tarlow, D., Rau, D. Lancet, 1971, ii, 376. Idéo, G., de Franchis, D., Del Ninno, E., Dioguardi, N. ibid. p. 825. Rosalki, S. B., Rau, D., Lehmann, D., Prentice, M. Ann. clin. Biochem. 1970, 7, 143.