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)

In a hematologic survey conducted in 1972, microcythemia in school children was found to be associated with microcythemia in other family members. The association of cultural characteristics of chronic poverty with reduced red cell volume suggested nutritional iron deficiency. A resurvey of families was made in 1975. For 39 children between the ages of 3 and 10 years at the time of both surveys, mean hemoglobin concentration (HGB) decreased from 21.0 g/dl to 10.8 g/dl. Thirteen infants, 6 months to 3 years of age in 1972, in the resurveyed families had mean HGB of 11.5 g/dl as compared to 10.4 g/dl for 9 similarly aged children newly born into the resurvey families. The rate of somatic growth was unchanged during the interval between survey. During the interval between 1972 and 1975, food costs rose nationally, and the purchase of meat products decreased both nationally and (as found in this study) locally. The data suggest that the high cost of foods rich in micronutrients may increase the prevalence of iron deficiency in an impoverished community.
...
PMID:Effects of rise in food costs on hemoglobin concentrations of early school-age children, 1972-75. 70 99

An editorial in a previous issue of the New England Journal of Medicine August 17, 1978, recommends iron supplementation as a countermeasure to the iron deficiency of breast-fed infants. However, the dosage suggested may saturate the binding capacity of lactoferrin, an iron-binding protein found in human milk. Since lactoferrin, in combination with specific antibody, is essential for the beneficial bacteriostatic effects of milk against Escherichia coli, an added regimen of iron may impair this effect and prove detrimental to the infant. The question, then, of iron deficiency becomes essential. Evidence shows that the hemoglobin values of infants fed by normal mothers for approximately 7 months and infants fed by iron-deficient mothers are normal. The need for additional iron seems unlikely, especially if the infant diet is supplemented with food containing iron.
...
PMID:Nutrient deficiencies in breast-fed infants. 71 38

We followed up 238 infants on 7 occasions during their first year of life. The diets of the infants were systematically either supplemented or not supplemented with iron. Developmental changes in serum ferritin were determined from a group with adequate intake of iron and without evidence of iron deficiency by three laboratory criteria: hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume and transferrin saturation. The data indicate that the average level of serum ferritin correlates well with iron nutrition within groups of infants since the developmental changes are in accordance with the known changes in storage iron, the level of serum ferritin correlates with iron intake, and low ferritin levels are associated with lower transferrin saturation. The usefulness of serum ferritin as the sole criterion of iron deficiency in individual infants is limited, suggesting the use of more than one indicator to refine the diagnosis of iron deficiency without anemia.
...
PMID:Serum ferritin in assessment of iron nutrition in healthy infants. 71 74

In a previous study of secondary lead smelter workers (males), a significant prevalence of low hemoglobin levels (less than 14 g/100 ml) was found; a statistically significant negative correlation between hemoglobin and zinc protoporphyrin was also detected. In the present study serum iron (Fe) levels and total iron binding capacity (TIBC) were included in the investigation of 111 secondary lead smelter workers and 37 nonexposed controls. The distribution and mean values of serum iron and TIBC were found to be in the normal range in the lead exposed workers; there was no significant difference when compared to the control population. There was no significant correlation between blood lead or zinc protoporphyrin and serum iron, TIBC and Fe/TIBC. A statistically significant negative correlation between hemoglobin and blood lead levels was found; the correlation between hemoglobin and zinc protoporphyrin reached a much higher level of significance. The results support the view that anemia (low hemoglobin levels) in lead exposed male workers is related to the heme synthesis inhibiting effects of lead, as reflected by elevated zinc protoporphyrin levels, and is not due to iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin, serum iron, and zinc protoporphyrin in lead-exposed workers. 72 Mar 9

As part of a study of anemia associated with oral contraceptive use, serum vitamin B12 levels, unsaturated B12-binding capacity, and B12 binder fractionation were examined in 67 consecutive mildly anemic (hemoglobin levels below 13 gm%) women using oral contraceptives and 59 such women using other means of birth control. Results were correlated with hematologic parameters such as complete blood counts and evaluation of iron status. Hemoglobin levels were significantly lower (p 0.01) in the non-oral-contraceptive group, while serum iron levels were significantly higher (p 0.05) in the oral contraceptive group and fewer oral contraceptive users demonstrated iron-deficiency anemia. While no B12-deficient subjects were found, serum B12 levels were significantly lower among oral contraceptive users (p 0.05), but differences were more striking between iron-deficient and non-iron deficient subjects, regardless of oral contraceptive status (p 0.02). The role of iron status needs further clarification as the finding of higher serum B12 levels in iron-deficient subjects contrasts with previous reports of lower B12 levels in cases of disease-related iron deficiency. Moreover, the relationship between iron status and serum B12 level was significant only in the oral contraceptive group. Among pill users, iron deficiency was most frequent in those taking sequential rather than combination preparations (67 vs. 39%). Among non-oral-contraceptive subjects, iron deficiency incidence was 96% in IUD users. Serum unsaturated B12 binding capacity was unaffected by pill use, but pill users showed significantly higher transcobalamin I levels, correlating best with white blood cell counts. The assumption that this elevation reflects pill effect on protein synthesis is premature, even though a general increase in alpha 1-globulin has been reported in pill users. Transcobalamin II and 3rd binder levels were not affected and did not correlate with white blood counts. The correlation between UBBC levels and white blood cell counts was significant in both oral contraceptive and non-oral-contraceptive groups. In contrast to previous findings, UBBC could not correlated with any iron parameter.
...
PMID:Serum vitamin B12 and B12-binding protein levels associated with oral contraceptives. 72 97

Percentile curves were calculated for hemoglobin and mean corpuscular volume in children between 0.5 and 16 years of age. The curves were derived from several populations of non-indigent white children who lived near sea level. Subjects were excluded from the reference population if they had laboratory evidence of iron deficiency, thalassemia minor, and/or hemoglobinopathy. The final reference populations included 9,946 children for the derivation of the hemoglobin curves and 2,314 for the MCV curves. The percentile curves should be particularly applicable to the diagnosis and screening of iron deficiency and thalassemia minor.
...
PMID:Percentile curves for hemoglobin and red cell volume in infancy and childhood. 75 17

The protoporphyrinemia of iron deficiency is well recognized. Clinically, information on the protoporphyrin/heme molar ratio in whole blood offers certain advantages over protoporphyrin measurement alone. A procedure for determining this ratio is reported. Protoporphyrin is extracted, solubilized, and measured fluorometrically. Heme (as hemin chloride) is precipitated with the blood proteins, the precipitate is dissolved in an alkaline/pyridine solvent, and the resulting bispyridine ferriprotoporphyrin is measured spectrophotometrically. The molar ratio of these two metabolites correlates well with values for plasma ferritin, plasma iron, transferrin saturation, hemoglobin, and hematocrit. In some cases the ratio increases detectably while the other variables, especially hematocrit and hemoglobin, remain normal. Evidently it is a more sensitive index to iron status. For healthy men and women, the mean ratio is 16.0 (SD, 5.3). The mean + 3 SD, or a ratio of 32, is distinctly abnormal, as shown by a confirmatory test. We validated the test by surveying routine blood specimens obtained from several population groups.
...
PMID:Erythrocyte protoporphyrin/heme ratio in the assessment of iron status. 76 86

It has been reported that large numbers of elderly Americans are moderately anemic because of iron deficiency anemia. In the present study, information has been obtained concerning blood composition, health, and nutritional habits of 779 people over 60 years of age, institutionalized or free-living in the Boston area. This paper presents the results of their blood examinations. Two hundred twenty-one of the free-living people examined who showed hemoglobin levels between 9 and 12.9 g/dl agreed to participate in an iron fortification study. Two-thirds of them received iron-fortified grain products daily for 6 to 8 months. The rest received the same foods without added iron. At the end of the experimental period a marked increase in hemoglobin levels averaging 1.4 g/dl was observed in both groups. This appeared to be attributable to an undefined intervention effect; no measurable effects attributable to the iron fortification were observed. Three months of daily ferrous sulfate administration to those whose hemoglobin levels remained below 13 g/dl was without effect. Examination of the data obtained suggests that the cause of the moderately low hemoglobin levels initially observed was not occult bleeding or folic acid or iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Studies of the elderly in Boston. I. The effects of iron fortification on moderately anemic peole. 83 9

Free erythrocyte porphyrin:hemoglobin (FEP:Hb) ratios were determined on 20 infants with iron-deficiency anemia. FEB:Hb ratios were compared with simultaneously drawn serum ferritin and serum transferrin saturation levels. FEP:Hb ratios dropped steadily during treatment of the anemic infants, but remained elevated compared to age-matched nonanemic infants, until the anemia was corrected. FEP:Hb ratios detected iron deficiency when acute inflammatory disease was present. Serum ferritin levels and transferrin saturation failed to detect iron deficiency after iron therapy was started or when acute inflammatory disease was present. Measurement of FEP:Hb ratios is a reliable and practical way to make a prompt diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia in infants.
...
PMID:Free erythrocyte porphyrin: hemoglobin ratios, serum ferritin, and transferrin saturation levels during treatment of infants with iron-deficiency anemia. 83 52

The frequency of thalassemia was determined in a group of 541 healthy adult black males. Individuals with decreased mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) values were evaluated further with hemoglobin analysis, iron studies, and globin chain synthesis. Of the males screened, 13.4% had MCH levels below 27.0 pg, while 1.4% had heterozygous beta thalassemia, 2.3% had iron deficiency, and 5.7% had globin synthesis findings compatible with the diagnosis of alpha thalassemia trait (alpha thalassemia-1). This study suggests that thalassemia is one of the most frequent hematologically depictable abnormalities in American blacks.
...
PMID:Frequencies of thalassemia in American blacks. 86 79


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>