An Autobiographical Report of Gout in a Patient Unable to Tolerate Conventional Therapy: The Unbearable Pain of Podagra
Philip R Cohen

TL;DR
A 65-year-old man with gout found relief using vitamin C after being unable to tolerate standard medications.
Contribution
The paper presents a case where vitamin C was used as an alternative treatment for gout when conventional therapies were not viable.
Findings
The patient experienced no gout recurrence after using vitamin C for a year.
Vitamin C may lower serum uric acid levels and reduce gout risk.
Alternative therapies can be considered when standard gout medications are ineffective or contraindicated.
Abstract
Gout is typically characterized by hyperuricemia and monosodium urate deposition in and around the joints. In individuals affected by gout, the condition can progress through the following phases: asymptomatic hyperuricemia, monosodium urate crystal deposition, acute gout, intercritical period, and chronic gout. Two of the following are required to establish the diagnosis of gout: at least two attacks, observation or a history of podagra or the presence of a tophus, and prompt response after starting treatment with colchicine. A 65-year-old man whose acute gout attack presented with a warm, exquisitely tender, erythematous, area of swelling that affected the first metatarsal of his left great toe (podagra) is described. A short oral course of prednisone treatment successfully managed his acute gout attack. His subsequent workup revealed a slightly elevated serum uric acid level and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGout, Hyperuricemia, Uric Acid · Hematological disorders and diagnostics · Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity and Protection
