“…In most cases, hyperphosphatemia is transient, with a fall in the normal range for most patients within a few hours, while the concentration of serum calcium, potassium, and creatinine fluctuates but generally remains within the normal range. Remarkably, these effects are more common and potentially more severe in infants, and patients with gastrointestinal motility disorders, renal or neurological impairment, determining an unpredictable rise in hematic phosphate and a consequent fall in calcemia [ 29 , 40 ]. However, severe and fatal reactions have also been reported with small doses in infants without predisposing gastrointestinal or renal diseases [ 41 , 42 ].…”