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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
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The prevalence of protein energy malnutrition (PEM) and nutritional anaemia was investigated in 392 black children, aged 13--60 months, living in a poor rural area. Breast feeding was practised extensively in the population (median duration 14 months). The overall prevalence of PEM was 16,4%, but severe PEM occurred in only 2,7% of the children. Anaemia was present in 6,7% of children, and was almost invariably associated with iron deficiency. Biochemical evidence of iron, folate and vitamin B12 deficiency was detected in 36%, 14,8%, and 0,3% of children respectively. Anaemia was almost confined to the 1-year-old group, but biochemical evidence of iron deficiency, while highest in this age group, continued into the 2-4-year age group. No relationship was found between ecological factors such as income, educational status, etc. and any of the anthropometric, biochemical or haematological variables. The prevalence of PEM and anaemia in these poor rural children is lower than that of a comparable group of underprivileged urban children, thus emphasizing that city slum conditions are producing considerable nutritional problems in their wake. It is of importance to investigate further why some children who are severely deprived in many ways do not necessarily manifest a proportional degree of nutritional deprivation.
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PMID:Protein energy malnutrition and nutritional anaemia in preschool children in rural KwaZulu. 41 6

A total of 4939 apparently healthy Fijian and Indian subjects living in Fiji were tested for anaemia by determination of the microhaematocrit of a sample of capillary blood. The prevalence of anaemia during childhood varied with age but was similar for Fijians and Indians of either sex. The overall prevalences were: 0-4 years, 20.3%; 5-9 years, 3.7%; 10-14 years, 23.5%. The prevalence of anaemia among Indian women (33.3%) was substantially higher than that for Indian men (6.9%), Fijian women (8.1%) or Fijian men (6.8%). Iron deficiency was the most common cause of anaemia and was established by laboratory studies in 203 (68%) of 298 anaemic subjects who were followed up. Iron deficiency was an important aetiological factor in 91 (93%) of 98 subjects with moderate or severe anaemia. Folate deficiency was found, usually in combination with iron deficiency, in 44 or 141 anaemic indian adults were followed up. Folate deficiency was uncommon in Fijian adults and among children of either race. Two cases of nutritional vitamin B12 deficiency, one case of pernicious anaemia, 6 cases of heterozygous thalassaemia and one case of heterozygous haemoglobin E were found among the anaemic Indian subjects. No cases of vitamin B12 deficiency anaemia, thalassaemia or haemoglobinopathy were detected among the Fijians. In 5 Indians and 7 Fijians the anaemia was associated with an underlying chronic disorder. This study emphasizes that in Fiji, as in other developing countries, nutritional anaemia is prevalent among asymptomatic subjects. Iron deficiency is by far the most common cause.
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PMID:The prevalence and nature of anemia among apparently normal subjects in Fiji. 52 78

The prevalence and type of nutritional anemia was investigated in 344 children aged 1 to 16 years of mixed race and living in a poor urban setting. Iron deficiency anemia was common in 1-year-old children (23%) as was biochemical evidence of iron deficiency (53%). Anemia rates were minimal in older children and the prevalence of iron deficiency decreased with age. Folate deficiency did not appear to contribute to the etiology of anemia, and nutritional vitamin B12 deficiency was not present. No-relationship could be found between a number of familial variables and hematological nutritional status. It is suggested that to identify families whose children are at risk for nutritional anemia new approaches will be needed to define their characteristics.
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PMID:Anemia in urban underprivileged children. Iron, folate, and vitamin B12 nutrition. 86 88

In seven patients with marked megaloblastic anemia (MCV greater than 110 fl), red cell size distribution curves (erythrograms) demonstrated the size of red cells produced after therapy. In six, the new red cells were normocytic throughout recovery. In the seventh patient, folate repletion along produced a new population of microcytes, due to unsuspected iron deficiency; after iron repletion normocytes were produced. Three patients with autoimmune hemolytic anemia had macrocytosis (MCV greater than 110 fl) without folate or vitamin B12 deficiency. During recovery with predisone therapy, instead of a discrete new normocytic population appearing, the entire population progressively returned to normal size. Normal rather than "stress" reticulocytes, and remodeled stress reticulocytes remaining, may explain this different pattern of recovery. Two patients initially had minor subpopulations of smaller red cells that disappeared soon after therapy. These probably reflected the dyserythropoiesis of severe megaloblastic anemia.
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PMID:Erythropoiesis during recovery from macrocytic anemia: macrocytes, normocytes, and microcytes. 92 66

The anemia observed in patients with partial gastric resection results from a complex interrelationship of deficiencies of these three important hematemics-iron, vitamin B12, and folic acid. Reliance upon morphological evidence of anemia in the peripheral blood smear may be difficult and confusing since deficiency of one hematemic may mask the coexisting deficiency of another. It is common for deficiencies of more than one hematemic to occur in these patients. A number of studies have demonstrated the masking effect of iron deficiency on concurrent vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency. In addition, the morphologic hallmarks of iron deficiency may be modified by the presence of deficiencies of either vitamin B12 or folate or both. Full hematologic recovery may not occur until more than one hematemic is given to the patient. It is our policy at the University of Florida to rely on serum levels of these three hematemics, especially vitamin B12 and iron, to detect the cause of the anemia in a patient with partial gastric resection. Less reliance is placed upon the appearance of the peripheral smear because of the masking effect described above. If either the serum iron level or vitamin B12 level is decreased, we treat the patient with a preparation such as ferrous sulfate (300 mg. orally three times a day) and vitamin B12 (100 mug. intramuscularly once a month). We are less concerned with folic acid deficiency because of its relatively infrequent occurrence in this setting and because a good diet will usually suffice as adequate therapy for the folic acid deficiency when present. In patients who have had partial gastric resection but who are not anemic, we assess vitamin B12 absorption by the conventional vitamin B12 urinary excretion test (Schilling test) on a yearly basis since deficiency of this hematemic may lead to serious hematologic and neurologic sequelae. If the patient manifests decreased vitamin B12 absorption uncorrected by the administration of pancreatic extract or antibiotics, this patient is also treated with 100 mug. of vitamin B12 intramuscularly on a monthly basis. We have not evaluated the absorption of food B12 as suggested by Doscherholmen. Perhaps more attention should be paid to this aspect of vitamin B12 absorption in these patients. Indeed, because of the serious complications of vitamin B12 deficiency and the observations that deficiencies of this vitamin may occur even when the absorption of crystalline vitamin B12 is normal in the fasting state (the conventional Schilling test), some authors, such as Rygvold, have suggested that prophylactic vitamin B12 be administered to all patients with partial gastric resection.
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PMID:Hematologic abnormalities following gastric resection. 95 76

Alterations in reticulocyte size occur 2-3 days after the onset of iron deficient or megaloblastic erythropoiesis and precede, by several weeks, changes in mean corpuscular volume (MCV). Iron-deficiency anemia induced in a normal subject by repeated phlebotomies was characterized by the initial development of larger than normal reticulocytes followed by an abrupt decrease in reticulocyte size. Microreticulocytes appeared 3 days after the fall in per cent iron saturation and antedated the decrease in MCV to below normal by 6 wk. Mean reticulocyte size was disproportionately smaller than normal in patients presenting with iron deficiency. In contrast, reticulocyte size increased abruptly in a patient (and rats) 2-3 days after administration of methotrexate. Mean reticulocyte size was disproportionately larger than normal in patients presenting with folate or vitamin B12 deficiency. Specific replacement therapy with iron, folate, or vitamin B12 was quickly followed by normalization of reticulocyte size.
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PMID:Reticulocyte size in nutritional anemias. 97 64

A high negative correlation (coefficient similar to 0.9) between increased 59Fe absorption from a diagnostic 0.56 mg 59Fe2+ dose and the depletion of available storage iron was observed in menstruating and pregnant women, fullterm and premature infants, blood donors, patients with infections, inflammations, tumors, hepatic cirrhosis, gastric surgery, increased urogenital or gastrointestinal blood loss. The increased diagnostic 59Fe2+ absorption is a reliable and sensitive indicator of at least depleted iron stores or prelatent iron deficiency as caused by iron malnutrition or maldigestion, increased iron requirement in pregnancy, infancy, urogenital or gastrointestinal blood loss. Although the messenger system which signalyzes the depletion of iron stores to the iron absorbing enterocytes of the duodenal and jejunal mucosa is not yet known available storage iron seems to control intestinal iron absorption under normal and the great majority o pathological condition in humans. Anemia per se or high erythropoietin levels in blood do not influence iron absorption since patients with even severe erythroblastic hypoplasia, aplastic anemia and megaloblastic anemia due to vitamin B12 deficiency absorb iron according to their iron stores. An only mild hyperplasia of the erythropoietic system in the bone marrow does also not effect iron absorption which was still under the control of available storage iron in patients with hereditary spherocytosis, nonspherocytic congenital hemolytic anemia due to glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, acquired hemolytic anemia and vitamin B12 deficiency induced megaloblastic anemia..
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PMID:Intestinal iron absorption under the influence of available storage iron and erythroblastic hyperplasia. Comparative studies in children with hereditary spherocytosis, nonspherocytic enzymopenic hemolytic anemia, acquired hemolytic anemia, vitamin B12 deficiency induced megaloblastic anemia, erythroblastic hypoplasia and aplastic anemia. 113 Jan 21

Four hundred and seven pregnant women, living in Sobradinho, a satellite city of Brasilia, Brazil, divided in three groups according to their gestation age: I trimester (50 cases); II trimester (140 cases); III trimester (201 cases), were studied for the hemoglobin concentration of their blood and intestinal parasitism. In nineteen of the anemic women iron, folic acid and vitamin B12 serum determinations were done. The mean hemoglobin concentration and the percentage of anemia (less than 12 g/100 ml) in the different stages of gestation, were: 13.06 g/100 ml and 22% for the first trimester: 12.49 g/100 ml and 29% for the second trimester and 12.11 g/100 ml and 34% for the third trimester. In the 19 cases of the anemic group studied we found 73.7% of iron deficiency (below 60 microg/100 ml); 26.3% of folic acid deficiency (below 4 ng/ml) and 10.5% of vitamin B12 deficiency (below 140 pg/ ml). A combined deficiency occured in two cases: iron plus folic acid (case 11, table 3) and folic acid plus vitamin B12 (case 3, table 3). The stool examination showed parasitic infection, in 51% of the women.
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PMID:[Anemia in pregnant women of Sobradinho, a satellite city of Brazilia, Brazil (author's transl)]. 121 28

Almost all segments of the gastrointestinal tract have been used as urinary tract substitutes. The specific nutritional and gastrointestinal complications depend on the particular portion of bowel that is removed from the alimentary tract. The use of stomach theoretically may predispose the patient to hypergastrinemia and peptic ulcer disease, hypocalcemia, and iron deficiency or megaloblastic anemia. Resection of a large amount of jejunum causes malabsorption. Limited use of colon segments usually is well tolerated, but loss of large parts of the colon directly decreases available absorptive area, resulting in diarrhea. Resection of the ileum and ileocecal valve can lead to several disease states. One is mixed secretory-osmotic diarrhea. Decreased ileal reabsorption of bile salts results in fat malabsorption and steatorrhea. The presentation of increased amounts of bile salts and fatty acids to the colon decreases water absorption and stimulates active chloride and water secretion, producing a cholera-like high-volume secretory diarrhea. The loss of the ileocecal valve and ileum segment accelerates intestinal transit time, which does not allow for complete digestion and absorption of food. Water and electrolytes remain associated with undigested food particles and may overwhelm the absorptive capacity of the colon, resulting in an osmotic diarrhea. A second problem is vitamin B12 deficiency. Surgical reduction of sites in the terminal ileum for active and exclusive uptake of vitamin B12 might lead to hypovitaminosis. If this is unrecognized, patients may develop irreversible neurologic injury. A third problem is cholelithiasis. Derangements in bile salt metabolism can occur when as little as 10 cm of ileum is resected, and the propensity to form gallstones is increased. Pigment gallstones appear to be the predominant stone associated with ileal resections. The fourth possible problem is urolithiasis, the etiology of which is multifactorial in patients with ileal resections. With decreased availability of bile salts, fat malabsorption occurs. Fatty acids bind with calcium and magnesium to form soaps, resulting in increased levels of free oxalate available for absorption. Moreover, fatty acids directly increase colonic permeability to oxalate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Nutritional and gastrointestinal complications of the use of bowel segments in the lower urinary tract. 194 6

Studies in children fed alternative diets showed that anthropometric parameters and the intake of energy and nutrients by macrobiotic children deviated most from current norms. Therefore weaning practice, growth and haematological status were investigated in 3 age-cohorts of macrobiotic fed infants between 4 and 18 months of age and a control group. A mixed longitudinal design was used for this study. Main findings were a growth retardation which was strongest in the second cohort (8-14 months of age) and related to a diet low in energy density, fat and protein. Haematological data revealed very low vitamin B12 concentrations with consequently low values of haematocrit and red blood cell count and higher values of mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular haemaglobin mass in the macrobiotic group. High folate concentrations also seemed to be a consequence of Vitamin B12 deficiency. Iron deficiency was found in 15% of the macrobiotic group vs. no infants in the control group. Nutritional recommendations acceptable within the macrobiotic philosophy are discussed.
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PMID:Stunting and nutrient deficiencies in children on alternative diets. 195 14


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