“…Seven patients had peripheral joint gout or risk factors for monosodium urate crystal deposits such as hyperuricemia, poorly controlled type 2 diabetes, obesity, alcohol intake, overweight, renal insufficiency, and cardiovascular disease before being diagnosed with gout presenting with anterior chest pain. Only 1 patient had no risk factors or family history and later presented with a painful, increasing bony mass in the sternal notch that resembled a malignant tumor [ 3 ]. Of all the sites of gout attacks, the sternoclavicular joint was the most common ( n = 4), the others being the costal cartilage ( n = 2) and manubriosternal joint ( n = 2).…”