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Clinical Crossroads Update |

An 87-Year-Old Woman Taking a Benzodiazepine, 1 Year Later

Richard A. Parker, MD; Erin E. Hartman, MS
JAMA. 1999;282(20):1960. doi:10.1001/jama.282.20.1960.
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At Psychiatry Grand Rounds in November 1998, Carl Salzman, MD,1 discussed the risks and benefits of benzodiazepines. Ms B, an 87-year-old woman, described many years of low mood punctuated by episodes of anxiety. She articulated her sense of well being, which she attributed to the use of Xanax (alprazolam). She described a long struggle with her primary care physician over the dosage level. Though she never suffered any ill consequences from the use of alprazolam, even at levels of 0.5 mg, 4 times per day, her physician did successfully taper her dosage down to 0.5 mg at bedtime by treating her mild dysthymia with 20 mg of paroxetine daily. Her medical regimen remains the same. Dr Salzman felt this combination was appropriate for her needs. In our follow-up interview, Ms B spoke in a monotone voice with little affect.

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