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Iron-Deficiency Anaemia

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Find balance and beat iron-deficiency anaemia. Iron deficiency, whether it is severe enough to lead to anaemia or not, can result from a number of health issues. According to research or other evidence, the following self-care steps may be helpful:

What you need to know

  • Take iron as directed
  • Follow your doctor’s instructions
  • Get your vitamin C
  • Eating vitamin C–rich foods with meals and taking 100 to 500 mg of vitamin C with iron supplements will improve your iron absorption
  • Don’t mix iron with drink breaks
  • Drinking coffee or tea with iron supplements inhibits absorption
  • Find the cause
  • Iron deficiency can have many non-nutritional causes, including some serious diseases, so work with your doctor to investigate why you are low in iron
  • Know your iron level
  • To avoid possible problems related to iron overload, have your blood tested regularly for both high and low iron while you are taking iron supplements

These recommendations are not comprehensive and are not intended to replace the advice of your doctor or chemist. Continue reading the full iron-deficiency anaemia article for more in-depth, fully-referenced information on medicines, vitamins, herbs, and dietary and lifestyle changes that may be helpful.

About iron-deficiency anaemia

Anaemia is a reduction in the number of red blood cells (RBCs); in the amount of haemoglobin in the blood (hemoglobin is the iron-containing pigment of the red blood cells that carry oxygen from the lungs to the tissues); and in another related index called hematocrit (the volume of RBCs after they have been spun in a centrifuge). All three values are measured on a complete blood count, also referred to as a CBC. Iron-deficiency anaemia can be distinguished from most other forms of anaemia by the fact that it causes RBCs to be abnormally small and pale, an observation easily appreciated by viewing a blood sample through a microscope.

Iron deficiency also can occur, even if someone is not anaemic. Symptoms of iron deficiency without anaemia may include fatigue, mood changes, and decreased cognitive function. Blood tests (such as serum ferritin, which measures the body’s iron stores) are available to detect iron deficiency, with or without anaemia.

Iron deficiency, whether it is severe enough to lead to anaemia or not, can have many non-nutritional causes (such as excessive menstrual bleeding, bleeding ulcers, haemorrhoids, gastro-intestinal bleeding caused by aspirin or related drugs, frequent blood donations, or colon cancer) or can be caused by a lack of dietary iron. Menstrual bleeding is probably the leading cause of iron deficiency. However, despite common beliefs to the contrary, only about one premenopausal woman in ten is iron deficient.1 Deficiency of vitamin B12, folic acid, vitamin B6, or copper can cause other forms of anaemia, and there are many other causes of anaemia that are unrelated to nutrition. This article will only cover iron-deficiency anaemia.

Product ratings for iron-deficiency anaemia

Science Ratings Nutritional Supplements Herbs
3Stars

Iron

Liver extracts

 
2Stars

Taurine

Vitamin A (as an adjunct to supplemental iron)

Vitamin C (as an adjunct to supplemental iron)

 
1Star

Betaine HCl (as an adjunct to supplemental iron)

 
3Stars Reliable and relatively consistent scientific data showing a substantial health benefit.
2Stars Contradictory, insufficient, or preliminary studies suggesting a health benefit or minimal health benefit.
1Star For a herb, supported by traditional use but minimal or no scientific evidence. For a supplement, little scientific support and/or minimal health benefit.

What are the symptoms?

Some common symptoms of anaemia include fatigue, lethargy, weakness, poor concentration, and impaired immune function. In iron-deficiency, fatigue also occurs because iron is needed to make optimal amounts of ATP—the energy source the body runs on. This fatigue usually begins long before a person is anaemic. Said another way, a lack of anaemia does not rule out iron deficiency in tired people. Another symptom of anaemia, called pica, is the desire to eat unusual things, such as ice, clay, cardboard, paint, or starch. Advanced anaemia may also result in lightheadedness, headaches, ringing in the ears (tinnitus), irritability, pale skin, unpleasant sensations in the legs with an uncontrollable urge to move them (restless legs syndrome), and getting winded easily.

Medical options

Over the counter products focus on replacing iron. Common forms of iron include ferrous sulphate (Feosol®, Fer-In-Sol®, Slow Fe®), ferrous fumarate (Femiron®, Feostat®), ferrous gluconate (Fergon®), and polysaccharide-iron complex (Niferex®, Nu-Iron®).

Injectable iron (InFeD®, DexFerrum®) is available with a prescription, and may be administered to those who cannot tolerate the oral forms.

Dietary changes that may be helpful

Iron deficiency is not usually caused by a lack of dietary iron alone. Nonetheless, a lack of iron in the diet is often part of the problem, so ensuring an adequate supply of iron is important for people with a documented deficiency. The most absorbable form of iron, called “heme” iron, is found in meat, poultry, and fish. Non-haem iron is also found in these foods, as well as in dried fruit, molasses, leafy green vegetables, wine, and most iron supplements. Acidic foods (such as tomato sauce) cooked in an iron pan can leech iron into the food and thus also be a source of dietary iron.

Vegetarians eat less iron than non-vegetarians, and the iron they eat is somewhat less absorbable. As a result, vegetarians are more likely to have reduced iron stores.2 Vegetarians can increase their iron intake by emphasizing iron-containing foods within their diet (see above), or in some cases by supplementing iron, if needed.

Coffee interferes with the absorption of iron.3 However, moderate intake of coffee (4 cups per day) may not adversely affect risk of iron-deficiency anaemia when the diet contains adequate amounts of iron and vitamin C.4 Black tea contains tannins that strongly inhibit the absorption of non-haem iron. In fact, this iron-blocking effect is so effective that drinking black tea can help treat haemochromatosis, a disease of iron overload.5 Consequently, people who are iron deficient should avoid drinking tea.

Fibre is another dietary component that can reduce the absorption of iron from foods. Foods high in bran fibre can reduce the absorption of iron from foods consumed at the same meal by half.6 Therefore, it makes sense for people needing to take iron supplements to avoid doing so at mealtimes if the meal contains significant amounts of fibre.

Vitamins that may be helpful

Before iron deficiency can be treated, it must be diagnosed and the cause must be found by a doctor. In addition to addressing the cause (e.g., avoiding aspirin, treating a bleeding ulcer, etc.), supplementation with iron is the primary way to resolve iron-deficiency anaemia.

If a doctor diagnoses iron deficiency, iron supplementation is essential. Though some doctors use higher amounts, a common daily dose for adults is 100 mg per day. Even though symptoms of deficiency should disappear much sooner, iron deficient people usually need to keep supplementing with iron for six months to one year until the ferritin test is completely normal. Even after taking enough iron to overcome the deficiency, some people with recurrent iron deficiency—particularly some premenopausal women—need to continue to supplement with smaller levels of iron, such as the 18 mg present in most multivitamin-mineral supplements. This need for continual iron supplementation even after deficiency has been overcome should be determined by a doctor.

Liver extracts from beef are a rich natural source of many vitamins and minerals, including iron. Bovine liver extracts provide the most absorbable form of iron—haem iron—as well as other nutrients critical in building blood, including vitamin B12 and folic acid. Liver extracts can contain as much as 3–4 mg of haem iron per gram.

Taking vitamin A and iron together has been reported to help overcome iron deficiency more effectively than iron supplements alone.7 Although the optimal amount of vitamin A needed to help people with iron deficiency has yet to be established, some doctors recommend 10,000 IU per day.

Vitamin C increases the absorption of non-haem iron.8 Some doctors advise iron-deficient people to take vitamin C (typically 100–500 mg) at the same time as their iron supplement.9

Hydrochloric acid produced by the stomach improves the absorption of non-haem iron from food and supplements. 10 11 Some practitioners recommend a hydrochloric acid supplement (e.g., betaine hydrochloride [betaine HCl]), to enhance iron absorption in people with iron-deficiency anaemia.

A high degree of association between iron-deficiency anaemia and vitamin D deficiency in Asian children has been previously reported.12 In three different ethnic groups living in England, iron-deficiency anaemia was found to be a significant risk factor for low vitamin D levels in children.13 These findings suggest that children with iron-deficiency anaemia should be screened for vitamin D deficiency and be given vitamin D supplements if necessary.

Taurine has been shown, in a double-blind study, to improve the response to iron therapy in young women with iron-deficiency anaemia.14 The amount of taurine used was 1,000 mg per day for 20 weeks, given in addition to iron therapy, but at a different time of the day. The mechanism by which taurine improves iron utilization is not known.

Caution: People who are not diagnosed with iron deficiency should not supplement with iron, because taking iron when it isn’t needed has no benefit and may do some harm. Adult iron supplements are the most common cause of fatal poisonings in children. Keep all iron supplements out of the reach of children.

Are there any side effects or interactions?
Refer to the individual supplement for information about any side effects or interactions.

References

1. Looker AC, Dallman PR, Carroll MD, et al. Prevalence of iron deficiency in the United States. JAMA 1997;277:973–6.

2. Sullivan JL. Stored iron and ischemic heart disease. Circulation 1992;86:1036 [editorial].

3. Morck TA, Lynch SR, Cook JD. Inhibition of food iron absorption by coffee. Am J Clin Nutr 1983;37:416–20.

4. Mehta SW, Pritchard ME, Stegman C. Contribution of coffee and tea to anemia among NHANES II participants. Nutr Res 1992;12:209–22.

5. Kaltwasser JP, Werner E, Schalk K, et al. Clinical trial on the effect of regular tea drinking on iron accumulation in genetic haemochromatosis. Gut 1998;43:699–704.

6. Cook JD, Noble NL, Morck TA, et al. Effect of fiber on nonheme iron absorption. Gastroenterology 1983;85:1354–8.

7. Mejia LA, Chew F. Hematological effect of supplementing anemic children with vitamin A alone and in combination with iron. Am J Clin Nutr 1988;48:595–600.

8. Ajayi OA, Nnaji UR. Effect of ascorbic acid supplementation on haematological response and ascorbic acid status of young female adults. Ann Nutr Metab 1990;34:32–6.

9. Hunt JR, Gallagher SK, Johnson LK. Effect of ascorbic acid on apparent iron absorption by women with low iron stores. Am J Clin Nutr 1994;59:1381–5.

10. Schade SG, Cohen RJ, Conrad ME. Effect of hydrochloric acid on iron absorption. N Engl J Med 1968;279:672–4.

11. Bezwoda W, Charlton R, Bothwell T, et al. The importance of gastric hydrochloric acid in the absorption of nonheme food iron. J Lab Clin Med 1978;92:108–16.

12. Grindulis H, Scott PH, Belton NR, Wharton BA. Combined deficiency of iron and vitamin D in Asian toddlers. Arch Dis Child 1986;61:843–8.

13. Lawson M, Thomas M. Vitamin D concentrations in Asian children aged 2 years living in England: population survey. BMJ 1999;318:28.

14. Sirdah MM, El-Agouza IMA, Abu Shahla ANK. Possible ameliorative effect of taurine in the treatment of iron-deficiency anaemia in female university students of Gaza, Palestine. Eur J Haematol 2002;69:236–2.