Abstract
The ingestion of calcium, along with alkali, results in a well-described triad of hypercalcemia, metabolic alkalosis, and renal insufficiency. Over time, the epidemiology and root cause of the syndrome have shifted, such that the disorder, originally called the milk-alkali syndrome, is now better described as the calcium-alkali syndrome. The calcium-alkali syndrome is an important cause of morbidity that may be on the rise, an unintended consequence of shifts in calcium and vitamin D intake in segments of the population. We review the pathophysiology of the calcium-alkali syndrome. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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Patel, A. M., Adeseun, G. A., & Goldfarb, S. (2013, November 27). Calcium-alkali syndrome in the modern era. Nutrients. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5124880
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