REVERSIBLE METASTATIC CALCIFICATION (MILK DRINKER'S SYNDROME)
- 26 June 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 155 (9) , 830-832
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1954.73690270001009
Abstract
Burnett and co-workers,1 in 1949, first reported metastatic calcification associated with excessive intake of milk and alkali in patients with chronic peptic ulcer and renal insufficiency. While all of their six patients showed clinical improvement when milk and alkali were withdrawn from the diet, none showed resorption of the calcinosis and none survived. Since that time a case has been reported with clinical improvement and survival following gastrectomy for the peptic ulcer, although the calcinosis persisted.2 Another case was presented with acute symptoms resembling gout in which both the symptoms and the calcinosis decreased when milk and alkali were withdrawn but recurred when the former high milk and alkali diet3 was resumed. Wermer, Kuschner, and Riley4 reported an instance of disappearance of extensive skeletal and subcutaneous metastatic calcifications within eight months after milk and alkali were removed from the diet. Their patient, a 67-year-old man, diedKeywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- ALUMINUM GELS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF RENAL PHOSPHATIC CALCULIJAMA, 1950
- STUDIES OF ALKALOSIS. I. RENAL FUNCTION DURING AND FOLLOWING ALKALOSIS RESULTING FROM PYLORIC OBSTRUCTION 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1950
- Hypercalcemia without Hypercalcuria or Hypophosphatemia, Calcinosis and Renal InsufficiencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1949
- ALKALOSIS COMPLICATING THE SIPPY TREATMENT OF PEPTIC ULCERArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1942