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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (
iron deficiency
)
7,156
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A placebo-controlled trial of intramuscular iron dextran prophylaxis for two-month-old infants was carried out on the north coast of Papua New Guinea where there is high transmission of
malaria
. The results indicate that the placebo group became relatively iron deficient whereas the iron dextran group had adequate iron stores and, in the absence of
malaria
, a higher mean haemoglobin. However in the iron dextran group there was a higher prevalence of
malaria
, as judged by parasite and spleen rates at 6- and 12-month follow-up; a lower haemoglobin associated with
malaria
when compared with the placebo group and a greater reticulocytosis in response to
malaria
infection. Within the placebo group it was noticed that the
malaria
rates were lower at follow-up in those infants who had had a low birth haemoglobin. In neither group was there apparent suppression of marrow activity in the presence of
malaria
.
Malaria
infection in both groups was associated with a significantly raised serum ferritin level and transferrin saturation. Over-all these data give evidence for a protective role of
iron deficiency
against
malaria
and would argue against the injudicious use of iron replacement in areas where
malaria
is endemic.
...
PMID:Iron supplementation increases prevalence and effects of malaria: report on clinical studies in Papua New Guinea. 310 Dec 43
Two hundred Hausa primigravidae at Zaria were divided into five groups in a randomized double-blind trial of antenatal oral antimalarial prophylaxis, and haematinic supplements. Group 1 received no active treatment. Groups 2 to 5 were given chloroquine 600 mg base once, followed by proguanil 100 mg per day. In addition, group 3 received iron 60 mg daily, group 4 folic acid 1 mg daily, and group 5 iron plus folic acid. Forty-five percent were anaemic (haemoglobin (Hb) less than 11.0 g dl-1) at first attendance before 24 weeks of gestation, and
malaria
parasitaemia (predominantly Plasmodium falciparum) was seen in 27%, of whom 60% were anaemic. The mean Hb fell during pregnancy in group 1, and seven patients in this group had to be removed from the trial and treated for severe anaemia (packed cell volume (PCV) less than 0.26). Only five patients in the other groups developed severe anaemia (P = 0.006), two of whom had
malaria
following failure to take treatment. Patients in group 1 had the lowest mean Hb at 28 and 36 weeks of gestation, and patients receiving antimalarials and iron (groups 3 and 5) had the highest Hb at 28 weeks, but differences were not significant, possibly due to removal from the trial of patients with severe anaemia. Anaemia (Hb less than 12.0 g dl-1) at six weeks after delivery was observed in 61% of those not receiving active treatment (group 1), in 39% of those protected against
malaria
but not receiving iron supplements (groups 2 and 4) and in only 18% of patients receiving both antimalarials and iron (groups 3 and 5). Folic acid had no significant effect on mean Hb. Proguanil was confirmed to be a highly effective causal prophylaxis. Prevention of
malaria
, without folic acid supplements, reduced the frequency of megaloblastic erythropoiesis from 56% to 25%. Folic acid supplements abolished megaloblastosis, except in three patients who were apparently not taking the treatment prescribed. Red cell folate (RCF) concentrations were higher in subjects with
malaria
, probably due to intracellular synthesis by plasmodia. Infants of mothers not receiving antimalarials appeared to have an erythroid hyperplasia. Maternal folate supplements raised infants' serum folate and RCF. Fourteen per cent had low birth weight (less than 2500 g), and the perinatal death rate was 11%; the greatest number were in group 1, but not significantly. A regime is proposed for the prevention of
malaria
,
iron deficiency
, folate deficiency and anaemia in pregnancy in the guinea savanna of Nigeria.
...
PMID:The prevention of anaemia in pregnancy in primigravidae in the guinea savanna of Nigeria. 353 Jan 58
Clinical observation has suggested that
iron deficiency
may be protective in
malaria
, and we have found that desferrioxamine (DF), an iron-specific chelating agent, inhibited Plasmodium falciparum growth in vitro. It was difficult to be confident that DF would be effective in an intact animal, however, because continuous exposure to DF was required in vitro and, in vivo, DF is rapidly excreted. Also, the in vitro effect of DF was overcome by addition of iron to the culture and in vivo there are potentially high local iron concentrations when iron is absorbed from the diet or released from reticuloendothelial cells. We now show that DF given by constant subcutaneous infusion does suppress parasitemia in P. falciparum-infected Aotus monkeys.
...
PMID:Desferrioxamine suppresses Plasmodium falciparum in Aotus monkeys. 354 39
To establish the prevalence of anaemia in pregnant women in Mozambique and to determine the locally most important causes of the disease, 881 pregnant women were examined at nine sites in seven of Mozambique's 10 provinces. In Maputo, the capital city, an additional 91 anaemic gravidae were compared to 207 parturients chosen at random. The study comprised interviews, and clinical and laboratory investigations. Between 5 and 15% of the pregnant women at the different sites had haemoglobin (Hb) values below 90 g/l and 58% had levels below 110 g/l. Inspection of mucosal membranes detected almost all the anaemic women with Hb values below 80 g/l. Nulliparous women were more prone to be anaemic.
Iron deficiency
and
malaria
were the main causes of anaemia, with malnutrition also contributing. Occasional cases of folic acid deficiency were found among severely anaemic women but no cases of significant deficiency of vitamin B12 were encountered. Sickle cell disease was not found to contribute significantly to anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. The mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) proved more sensitive, under these conditions, than serum ferritin in detecting
iron deficiency
in anaemic women. Packed cell volume (PCV) analysis may substitute Hb analysis when screening for pregnancy anaemia in Mozambique.
...
PMID:Anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. 378 85
Haemoglobin concentration, serum iron, iron binding capacity, transferrin saturation, free erythrocyte protoporphyrin and serum ferritin (SF) were measured in 66 elite non-pregnant and 95 pregnant (27 elite and 68 non-elite) Nigerian women at Zaria, in the guinea savanna. Anaemia (as defined) was observed in 46% non-pregnant, 37% pregnant elite and 52% pregnant non-elite women.
Iron deficiency
(as defined) was diagnosed in 54, 30 and 25%, respectively. The mean SF in pregnant elite (28.9 micrograms l-1 was lower, but not significantly, than in pregnant non-elite women (33.6 micrograms l-1, either because of less inflammatory disease or because of more
iron deficiency
. The prevalence of anaemia tended to fall with increasing parity, being 52% in primigravidae and 40% in grande-multigravidae; this was probably due to greater risk of
malaria
-induced anaemia in primigravidae. In contrast, prevalence of
iron deficiency
increased with parity, being 18 and 35%, respectively, in primigravidae and grande-multigravidae. Anaemia and
iron deficiency
were seen most frequently in the third trimester. Pregnant women in the north of Nigeria require iron supplements irrespective of socioeconomic status or maternal parity.
...
PMID:Anaemia and iron status of pregnant and non-pregnant women in the guinea savanna of Nigeria. 408 57
Madang district was selected for a longitudinal study of the effects of iron prophylaxis on infectious morbidity in infancy and the topography, climate, domicile, ethnology, demography, disease patterns, nutrition and health services of the district are described. The area has a tropical, humid climate and a mixed economy. Pneumonia was the main killing disease at all ages, and
malaria
was endemic. A base hospital and well organized maternal and child health services ensured that morbidity surveillance would be optimal. Pilot haematological surveys confirmed a high incidence of anaemia in infancy. Mean haemoglobin between nine and 52 weeks of age was 8.6 g/dl. Results suggested that
malaria
and
iron deficiency
were important causes of this anaemia.
...
PMID:Iron and infection in infancy--report on field studies in Papua New Guinea: 1. Demographic description and pilot surveys. 608 60
In a study in northern Liberia of the
malaria
and beta-thalassaemia hypothesis, the frequencies of beta-thalassaemia and HbS traits were 9.1 and 3.4% in the Mano and 9.5 and 1.7% in the Gio tribal samples. HbC and HbN were present at low frequency. G6PD deficiency was found in 16% of males. An observed increase with age of beta-thalassaemia trait frequencies was consistent with the selection hypothesis. However, we could not entirely exclude that associated
iron deficiency
influenced the results in the six to 11 month age group.
Malaria
was holoendemic; Plasmodium falciparum predominated, P. malariae and P. ovale were also identified. Plasmodium falciparum prevalence rates were similar in normal and beta-thalassaemia trait children but parasite densities were consistently lower in the latter. Using the criterion of a falciparum parasite density of 1 x 10(9) 1(-1) or greater to indicate a potentially important infection, the relative risk in beta-thalassaemia traits one to four years old from the cross-sectional study was 0.45 (upper 95% confidence interval 0.79) and 0.41 (0.61) in two to nine year trait carriers from a longitudinal study. Plasmodium falciparum gametocyte rates were lower in beta-thalassaemia trait children (P less than 0.005). The geometric mean titre of P. falciparum antibodies was lower in beta-thalassaemia trait children from the one to four year group (P less than 0.05). Otherwise immunological studies showed little difference between the different Hb types. Parasitological findings were consistent with relative resistance of HbS trait carriers towards P. falciparum infection. We found no evidence for relative resistance of beta-thalassaemia traits towards P. malariae infection nor that G6PD deficient males were more resistant to P. falciparum than those with normal activity. We conclude that the results are consistent with relative resistance of beta-thalassaemia trait carriers to P. falciparum
malaria
.
...
PMID:Falciparum malaria and beta-thalassaemia trait in northern Liberia. 635 19
Haematological indices, malarial parasitaemia, serum and red cell folate (SFA, RCF), serum vitamin B12 and haemoglobin (Hb) electrophoretic patterns were studied in 228 non-elite young Hausa primigravidae at less than 24 weeks of gestation. The study was conducted in the guinea savanna of Nigeria, where
malaria
is hyperendemic. Ninety-nine (43%) were anaemic (Hb less than 11.0 g dl-1). The commonest cause of anaemia was
malaria
, in 28% of all and 40% of anaemic subjects. Plasmodium falciparum was predominant; P. malariae was seen in 1.3% and P. ovale was not recorded. Parasitaemia was more frequent and more dense in the wet than the dry season.
Iron deficiency
was diagnosed in 18% of all and 25% of anaemic women; 14% of all patients were folate-deficient; high MCV and MCH correlated with anaemia, and low SFA was associated weakly with anaemia and
malaria
. Serum vitamin B12 was normal or high in all 145 in whom it was measured; 3% had congenital elliptocytosis, but this did not contribute to the anaemia. Sickle-cell trait was present in 26% and Hb-AC in less than 1%. Hb-AS was associated with significantly lower frequency and density of P. falciparum; this has not been demonstrated in pregnancy in Africa previously. However, the parasitological advantage was not reflected in any haematological advantage. The roles of
malaria
, folate-deficiency and iron-deficiency in the causation of anaemia in Hausa primigravidae will be defined further by a double-blind trial of antimalarial prophylactics, iron supplements and folic acid supplements.
...
PMID:Anaemia in young primigravidae in the guinea savanna of Nigeria: sickle-cell trait gives partial protection against malaria. 638 38
Infectious agents must acquire iron from their host to survive, and
iron deficiency
has been reported to protect against
malaria
in humans. We have tested the the susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum to iron deprivation by studying the effect of desferrioxamine (DF), a specific iron chelating agent, on parasite growth in an in vitro culture system. We have found that DF inhibits the growth of P. falciparum at concentrations readily achievable in vivo, by a mechanism that may involve interference with the completion of schizogony.
...
PMID:Plasmodium falciparum: inhibition of in vitro growth by desferrioxamine. 675 Nov 13
Iron in food is classified as belonging to the haem pool, the nonhaem pool, and extraneous sources. Haem iron is derived from vegetable and animal sources with varying bioavailability. Hookworm infestation of the intestinal tract affects 450 million people in the tropics. Schistosoma mansoni caused blood loss in 7 Egyptian patients of 7.5- 25.9 ml/day which is equivalent to a daily loss of iron of .6-7.3 mg daily urinary loss of iron in 9 Egyptian patients. Trichuris trichiura infestation by whipworm is widespread in children with blood loss of 5 ml/day/worm. The etiology of anemia in children besides
iron deficiency
includes
malaria
, bacterial or viral infections, folate deficiency and sickle-cell disease. Severe infections cause profound iron-deficiency anemia in children in central American and Malaysia. Plasmodium falciparum malaria-induced anaemia in tropical Africa lowers the mean haemoglobin concentration in the population by 2 g/dI, causing profound anaemia in some. The increased risk of premature delivery, low birthweight, fetal abnormalities, and fetal death is directly related to the degree of maternal anemia. Perinatal mortality was reduced from 38 to 4% in treated anemic mothers. Mental performance was significantly lower in anemic school children and improved after they received iron. Supplements of iron, soy-protein, calcium, and vitamins given to villagers with widespread malnutrition,
iron deficiency
, and hookworm infestation in Colombia reduced enteric infections in children. Severe iron-deficiency anemia was treated in adults in northern Nigeria by daily in Ferastral 10 ml, which is equivalent to 500 mg of iron per day. Choloroquine, folic acid, rephenium hydroxynaphthoate, and tetrachlorethylene treat adults with severe
iron deficiency
from hookworm infestation in rural tropical Africa. Blood transfusion is indicated if the patient is dying of anaemia or is pregnant with a haemoglobin concentration 6 gm/dl. In South East Asia, mg per day prevented iron-deficiency anaemia in pregnancy. Field-trials on nutritional
iron deficiency
include an acidified milk formula plus ferrous sulphate for infants; biscuits with added bovine hemoglobin for children in Chile; sugar plus sodium ferric EDTA in Guatemala; salt with ferric orthophosphate and sodium acid sulphate in India; and Salt with ferrous sulphate plus sodium hexametaphosphate.
...
PMID:Iron deficiency in the tropics. 704 57
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