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Milk Products in the Treatment of Hypophosphatemic Rickets: A Pilot Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Standard treatment for hypophosphatemic rickets (HR) involves oral phosphate tablets and vitamin D, but the rapid absorption of these tablets requires multiple daily doses, which can lead to fluctuations in phosphate levels and other complications.
  • A study was conducted with seven female patients to compare the effects of phosphorus from milk and cheese to traditional phosphate tablets, using a crossover design over multiple treatment sessions.
  • Results showed that milk, and to a lesser extent cheese, led to reduced parathyroid hormone levels and more stable phosphate levels compared to phosphate tablets, suggesting that milk might be a better phosphorus source for managing HR.

Article Abstract

Background: Standard treatment of hypophosphatemic rickets (HR) is oral phosphate tablets plus vitamin D. Due to the rapid absorption of phosphate tablets, frequent daily doses are necessary, which is cumbersome and may cause fluctuations in plasma phosphate and risk of secondary hyperparathyroidism. It was hypothesized that phosphate from milk or cheese is less rapidly absorbed, and reduces fluctuations in plasma phosphate.

Objectives: The current randomized, multiple crossover study aimed at investigating if an equivalent phosphate dose given as milk or cheese is comparable to phosphate tablets in patients with HR.

Methods: Seven females with HR were included. They went through three different four-day treatment sessions of either oral phosphate tablets consisting of 800 mg elemental phosphorus divided into five doses over the day or an equivalent phosphorus dose ingested as skimmed milk or cheese divided over five daily doses. Blood and urine samples were taken from patients after each treatment session. Except the usual doses of vitamin D, no phosphate or calcium-modifying treatments were allowed. Statistical analyses were performed using mixed models.

Results: Treatment feasibility was independent of the phosphorus source. The study demonstrated reduced plasma levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH), reduced fluctuations in plasma phosphate and plasma PTH, and reduced renal phosphate excretion when ingesting phosphorus supplementation as milk compared to phosphate tablets. The same trend was observed when administering phosphorus as cheese, though not statistically significant.

Conclusions: Phosphorus supplements can be administered as phosphate tablets, milk or cheese when given in equimolar doses. The current study findings indicated that milk may be superior to phosphate tablets as the phosphate source in patients with HR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6935710PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/ijem.91454DOI Listing

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