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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (
iron deficiency
)
7,156
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors describe two cases of geophagia (45 years old mother and her 25 years old daughter). Both suffered from an anaemia of medium degree only (case 1: 3.77 million of erythrocytes, Hb 8.5 g%; case 2: 3.34 million of erythrocytes, Hb 10 g%), there was a serious
iron deficiency
(46 and 35 microgram % respectively of serum iron). Both were blood donors, the mother 7 times and the daughter 31 times. In both cases the
iron deficiency
existed before geophagia. The desire for eating argillacecous earth already disappeared after the application of some ampules of
Ferrlecit
injected intravenously, even before the values of the serum iron and the number of erythrocytes had changed. The number of erythrocytes, the Hb value and that of haematocrit as well as the values of the serum iron normalized completely. EEG changes were observed in both cases, which could be influenced by the ferrotherapy. The authors recommend the serum iron estimation in all blood donors as well as the introduction of their routine treatment with iron preparations.
...
PMID:[Geophagia sideropenica]. 7 33
Use of recombinant human erythropoietin in patients with end-stage renal disease has highlighted
iron deficiency
as the major cause of resistant anemia. The current mainstay of intravenous (i.v.) iron replacement therapy, iron dextran, has been shown in prior studies to have a risk of serious life-threatening anaphylaxis of just under 1 per 100 patients exposed. The current study assessed the safety profile of an alternative i.v. iron, sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose (
Ferrlecit
), as compared with iron dextrans.
Sodium ferric gluconate complex
in sucrose, a unique chemical preparation, has been in use since 1959, principally in Europe, at a rate of approximately 2.7 million i.v. doses per year (1992 to 1996) in Germany and Italy alone. For iron dextran, usage in the United States was comparable--principally renal hemodialysis--and estimated from market sources at 3.0 million doses per year (1995). From 1976 to 1996, there were 74 allergic adverse events reported for sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose to the World Health Organization (WHO), German Health Bureau, and the manufacturer (all combined). For the years 1992 to 1996, sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose had an allergy event reporting rate of 3.3 allergy episodes per million doses per year compared with a similar rate of 8.7 reported allergy events per million doses per year for iron dextran in the United States in 1995. Case fatalities for sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose and iron dextran within these reports were then compared. For sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose, there were no reports of deaths over the entire period (1976 to 1996). However, for iron dextrans, there were 31 fatalities among 196 allergy/anaphylaxis cases reported in the United States between 1976 and 1996, yielding a case-fatality rate of 15.8%. These data show that sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose, when compared with iron dextrans in comparably sized patient usage populations with similar total rates of reporting of allergic events, has a significantly lower reported mortality rate (P < 0.001). Thus, the data justify usage of sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose as the safer iron replacement therapeutic agent.
...
PMID:Sodium ferric gluconate complex in sucrose: safer intravenous iron therapy than iron dextrans. 1007 Sep 26
Parenteral iron has been recommended for the treatment of
iron deficiency
in the majority of maintenance hemodialyzed (HD) patients. However, iron supplementation and consequent over saturation of transferrin and high iron levels, may aggravate oxidative stress already present in these patients. This study aimed to further clarify the role of repeated intravenous iron therapy as a supplementary cause of oxidative stress in HD patients. Markers of free radical activities (carbonyl reactive derivatives, CRD, thiol groups, SH, malondialdehyde, MDA) and antioxidant enzyme activities (superoxide dismutase, SOD and glutathione peroxidase, GPX) were determined in plasma and red blood cells (RBC) of 19 hemodialysis patients given a total iron dose of 625 mg (ferrogluconat,
Ferrlecit
, 62.5 mg). Blood samples were taken before the first and after the last dose of iron. Twenty apparently normal subjects served as healthy controls. Before iron treatment, HD patients exhibited increased concentrations of MDA and CRD in plasma and red blood cells, accompanied with impaired antioxidant capacity. All patients responded to iron therapy with a significant increase in their serum ferritin, serum iron, hemoglobin, and red blood cells levels. However, iron treatment resulted in enhanced oxidative stress in plasma of HD patients, since significant increase in plasma MDA and CRD concentrations, together with a decrease in nonprotein SH groups levels were detected. Supplementation with iron did not significantly influence plasma SOD and GPX activities, nor did any of the red blood cell parameters tested. Our data show that, despite improvement in hematological parameters, an increase in iron stores due to supplementation could also contribute to increased free radical production in HD patients.
...
PMID:Evaluation of oxidative stress after repeated intravenous iron supplementation. 1595 53