Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A brief survey of the literature on the side effects of oral contraceptives is given. Of the many influences on laboratory results those related to (reversible) cholestasis or to a change in protein synthesis are the most important ones. A decrease of the tolerance for glucose is sometimes observed. Few of the clinical side effects attributed to oral contraceptives can be directly correlated with the pharmaceutical action of these drugs. Many so-called side effects of the pill are due to other factors such as altered psychosociological or sexual behavior, etc. However, among users of oral contraceptives there is a significant decrease in the number of benign tumors, particularly of the breast, the uterus and the ovaries. It is still an open question if this also signifies protection against cancer. Anemias due to iron deficiency are less frequent among users of the pill. According to recent studies arterial hypertension and cholecystopathies are probably directly related to oral contraceptives, but a causal relation has not been proven for migraine, headaches, depression etc. An elevated risk for vascular complications seems to be well established: there is a 4-6-fold increase of the estimated risk for venous thrombo-embolism and a 4-9-fold increase for cerebrovascular accidents among users of oral contraceptives when compared with nonpregnant women of the same age not using the pill. Oral contraceptives act as a supplementary factor of risk which may cumulate with other similar factors, such as arterial hypertension, hyperlipidemia, overweight, smoking etc. Mortality due to oral contraceptives is very much 10-50 x) inferior to the one caused by delivery and the post partum state. Since the number of failures in prevention of pregnancies is less for oral contraceptives than for any other method of contraception, the overall risk of death under oral contraceptives in this age group of women is least.
...
PMID:[Real and seeming side-effects of oral contraceptives with an emphasis on medical and haematological problems. Review of literature (author's transl)]. 79 Mar 74

Therapy with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) can reverse anemia and improve the quality of life in anemic hemodialysis patients. However, therapy is costly and must be used efficiently. An initial rHuEPO dose less than 50 U/kg intravenously three times weekly may be adequate to achieve a hematocrit of 30-33% in many patients. Acquired iron deficiency is a common problem during rHuEPO therapy and must be prevented with oral and parenteral iron replacement to maintain the efficacy of rHuEPO. Patients should be monitored carefully for additional problems including: an increase in blood pressure; onset of seizures or headaches; increased blood potassium, phosphate, and creatinine concentrations; enhanced coagulability resulting in dialyzer and vascular access clotting; and myalgias with a 'flu-like' syndrome.
...
PMID:Practical approach to initiation of recombinant human erythropoietin therapy and prevention and management of adverse effects. 226 Jun 19

Recurrent, unexplained diarrhoea is the most common intestinal complaint in children aged 6 months to 3 years. We studied 27 consecutive children with this complaint and followed them up until the age of 5 years. Diarrhoea began at the mean age of 9 months (range 4 to 16 months) and resolved in 21 children by 3 years of age. Twelve children had had infantile colic earlier. In six patients diarrhoea was caused by food allergy (cows' milk allergy and allergy to fresh vegetables). Episodes of diarrhoea persisted in four of these six. Twenty one children had unexplained diarrhoea: this resolved in 19. Nutritional deficiencies were rare; only one child had iron deficiency. Relative weights of the children were significantly lower at 2 years than at 1 year of age. At 5 years of age six of the children continued to have episodes of diarrhoea, and abdominal pains, headaches, and atopy occurred more commonly than in the general population. We suggest that there are two major subgroups among children with recurrent diarrhoea--children with food allergy and those who react to environmental stresses with a variety of somatic symptoms.
...
PMID:Chronic non-specific diarrhoea. 401 49

A 30-year-old postpartum woman was admitted to our hospital because of progressive anemia, malaise, night sweating, headache and low grade fever which began 9 days after delivery (day 0). She had normocytic hypochromic anemia accompanied with marked decrease in reticulocytes. In addition, a temporary decrease in platelets and white blood cells especially neutrophils were observed. Bone marrow smears showed an apparent decrease in erythroid cells and the presence of giant proerythroblasts (1.2%) as well as hemophagocytes (1.2%). IgM and IgG antibody against human parvovirus B19 (HPV) was detected on day 22 of the disease although negative results were obtained on day 3. The presence of the virus in the blood on admission was confirmed by dot-blot analysis. Thus, this case was diagnosed as acute pure red cell aplasia and hemophagocytic syndrome caused by HPV infection. This patient had been given iron for iron deficiency anemia before delivery and the iron deficiency was still present after the episode of the present disease although the iron metabolism data was perturbed during the disease. These findings suggest that HPV could cause acute pure red cell aplasia not only in patients with hemolytic anemia but also in patients with iron deficiency anemia or after acute bleeding. Furthermore it is suggested that pancytopenia often observed on HPV infection could be at least partly caused by hemophagocytic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Postpartum parvovirus B19-associated acute pure red cell aplasia and hemophagocytic syndrome]. 756 95

Iron deficiency is a common pediatric problem affecting 20%-25% of the world's infants. Most commonly causing anemia, iron deficiency is also implicated in such neurologic sequelae as irritability, lethargy, headaches, developmental delay, and infrequently papilledema, pseudotumor cerebri, and cranial nerve abnormalities. Rarely has iron deficiency been recognized as a significant cause of stroke in the adult or pediatric populations. We report a series of 6 children, 6 to 18 months of age, who presented with an ischemic stroke or venous thrombosis after a viral prodrome. All patients had iron deficiency as a consistent finding among the group, and other known etiologies of childhood stroke were excluded. These patients provide evidence of a strong association between iron deficiency and ischemic events in children between 6 and 18 months of age.
...
PMID:Iron deficiency: a cause of stroke in infants and children. 904 2

This brief article describes actions to secure a safe pregnancy that minimize risk and increase the chances for delivering a healthy baby in Ghana. In Africa and Ghana, pregnancy is the desire of every woman, and most women keep it a secret during the first few months. Pregnancy is a period of emotional anxiety about bodily changes, about the gender of the unborn child, about the name of the child, or about the pain of delivery. Pregnancy demands careful selection of foods, drugs, and work load, for they all impact on the developing fetus. Failure to eat properly can result in anemia from iron deficiency, difficult labor and poor postpartum recovery, prematurity, low birth weight, or brain damage to the fetus. The placenta is not a barrier to drugs, alcohol, or tobacco. Even mild alcohol consumption or smoking can adversely affect the fetus. Pregnant women should exercise. Physical strength will increase flexibility, endurance, and muscle control necessary for labor, delivery, and postpartum recovery. Pregnant women should consult with their midwife before beginning an exercise or sports program. Walking is an easily done and safe pregnancy exercise that is easy to fit into a busy domestic schedule. Pregnant women should not lift heavy objects. If heavy lifting is unavoidable, then lifting should avoid stressing the lower back muscles. When lifting, women should bend from the knees to a squatting position and use leg muscles to resume a standing position. Danger signs that require immediate attention of a doctor include sharp abdominal pain, severe cramps, vaginal bleeding, leakage of fluid, fuzzy vision, sustained severe headache, a sudden increase in blood pressure, or no fetal movement for 24 hours after the 30th week of pregnancy.
...
PMID:Are you expecting? 1217 61

Every once in a while, female athletes hear the rumor that oral contraceptives (OCs) keep them from performing their best. Yet, studies that have tried to evaluate the effects of OCs on physically active women have not been conclusive. This rumor probably started with the initial, higher-dose formulations instead of with the current biphasic or triphasic OCs. Side effects of the higher-dose OCs included weight gain, nausea, fatigue, headaches, and increased risks of hypertension, thromboembolism, and changes in glucose and lipid metabolism. Current OCs minimize these side effects and the risk of complications. In fact, the aerobic exercise female athletes undergo most likely neutralizes the negative effects of OCs on coagulation and lipid metabolism. Further, OCs may even improve athletic performance because they can decrease bleeding, the risk of iron deficiency, and frequency of cramps. Moreover, athletes can use OCs to orchestrate their menstrual cycles around competitive meets. Some studies with small sample sizes show that athletes on OCs experience a slight reduction in functional aerobic capacity and endurance capability. A Swedish study of female soccer players reported that OC users suffer fewer traumatic injuries than nonusers. It is difficult to attribute this to OCs, because there is considerable psychological control over sports performance. A sports physician in Hawaii is aware of rumors that OCs induce sluggishness or fatigue during certain days of the month, but he does not know a female athlete who believes this. The head trainer of the US Olympic Committee says that many female Olympic athletes use OCs. Strenuous exercise, considerable weight loss, and possibly other stress factors induce athletic amenorrhea, especially in adolescent females. In many cases, OCs can treat it. They are especially needed to minimize the risk of reduced bone density and musculoskeletal injury.
...
PMID:Exercise and "the pill": putting a rumor to rest. 1228 95

Cancer-related anemia often develops from the infiltration of marrow by malignant cells, impaired hemoglobin (Hb) production related to chemotherapy or radiation therapy, iron deficiency, or low endogenous erythropoietin levels. Patients with cancer-related anemia may experience cognitive dysfunction including decreased mental alertness, poor concentration, and memory problems. Anemia-mediated cerebral hypoxia may cause symptoms such as headache, vertigo, tinnitus, and dizziness. These symptoms often are exacerbated in the elderly patient with cancer and related to underlying low Hb concentrations. Restoring Hb levels via the administration of iron supplements, blood transfusions, or, more recently, erythropoiesis-stimulating therapy (epoetin alfa) results in significant improvement of cognitive function. The use of epoetin alfa as a treatment option for patients with chemotherapy-associated anemia and an Hb concentration less than 10 g/dL has been recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the American Society of Hematology. Erythropoiesis-stimulating therapies are a promising treatment option for cancer-related anemia that may improve cognitive function and quality of life for patients with cancer.
...
PMID:Anemia in the oncology patient: cognitive function and cancer. 1502 12

Neuroimaging and management advances require review of indications for excluding cerebral venous sinus (sinovenous) thrombosis (CSVT) in children. Our goals were to examine (i) clinical presentations of CSVT, (ii) prothrombotic risk factors and other predisposing events, (iii) clinical and radiological features of brain lesions in CSVT compared with arterial stroke, and (iv) predictors of outcome. We studied 42 children with CSVT from five European paediatric neurology stroke registries. Patients aged from 3 weeks to 13 (median 5.75) years (27 boys; 64%) presented with lethargy, anorexia, headache, vomiting, seizures, focal signs or coma and with CSVT on neuroimaging. Seventeen had prior chronic conditions; of the 25 previously well patients, 23 had recent infections, eight became dehydrated and six had both. Two children had a history compatible with prior CSVT. Anaemia and/or microcytosis (21 probable iron deficiency, five haemolytic, including two with sickle cell disease and one with beta-thalassaemia) was as common (62%) as prothrombotic disorder (13/21 screened). High factor VIII and homozygosity for the thermolabile methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphism were the commonest prothrombotic disorders. The superficial venous system was involved in 32 patients, the deep in six, and both in four. Data on the 13 children with bland infarction and the 12 with haemorrhage in the context of CSVT were compared with those from 88 children with ischaemic (AIS) and 24 with haemorrhagic (AHS) arterial stroke. In multiple logistic regression, iron deficiency, parietal infarction and lack of caudate involvement independently predicted CSVT rather than arterial disease. Five patients died, three acutely, one after recurrence and one after 6 months being quadriparetic and blind. Follow-up ranged from 0.5 to 10 (median 1) years. Twenty-six patients (62%) had sequelae: pseudotumour cerebri in 12 and cognitive and/or behavioural disabilities in 14, associated with epilepsy in three, hemiparesis in two and visual problems in two. Eighteen patients, including six with haemorrhage, were anticoagulated. Older age [odds ratio (OR) 1.54, 95% confidence limits (CI) 1.12, 2.13, P = 0.008], lack of parenchymal abnormality (OR 0.17, 95% CI 0.02, 1.56, P = 0.1), anticoagulation (OR 24.2, 95% CI 1.96, 299) and lateral and/or sigmoid sinus involvement (OR 16.2, 95% CI 1.62, 161, P = 0.02) were independent predictors of good cognitive outcome, although the last predicted pseudotumour cerebri. Death was associated with coma at presentation. Of 19 patients with follow-up magnetic resonance (MR) venography, three had persistent occlusion, associated with anaemia and longer prodrome. A low threshold for CT or MR venography in children with acute neurological symptoms is essential. Nutritional deficiencies may be modifiable risk factors. A paediatric anticoagulation trial may be required, after the natural history has been further established from registries of cases with and without treatment.
...
PMID:Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis in children: risk factors, presentation, diagnosis and outcome. 1569 61

Reactive thrombocytosis (secondary thrombocytosis) is frequent and typically moderate. We report a case of extreme thrombocytosis and leukocytosis secondary to an iron deficiency anemia. A 21-year-old woman is admitted in emergency department for acute headache. Biological assessment reveals a severe microcytic anaemia (5.4 g/dL) with thrombocytosis (2500 giga/L) and leukocytosis (35 giga/L) leading to multiple diagnosis hypotheses. Finally, biological evaluation concludes to a diagnosis of iron deficiency anaemia related to insufficient oral intake and menorrhagia. Reactive hyperleukocytosis and thrombocytosis rapidly resolved with iron supplementation. This case is a reminder that iron deficiency-related thrombocytosis can sometimes be severe. However, the associated reactive leukocytosis is quite exceptional.
...
PMID:[Severe thrombocytosis and leukocytosis associated with iron deficiency anaemia: a case-report]. 1830 30


1 2 3 Next >>