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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A survey conducted in rural southern African black subjects indicated that dietary
iron overload
remains a major health problem. A full blood count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, serum concentrations of iron, total iron-binding capacity,
ferritin
, C-reactive protein (CRP), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) and serological screening for hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections were carried out in 370 subjects (214 inpatients and 156 ambulatory Mozambican refugees). The fact that the geometric mean (SD range) serum
ferritin
concentration was much higher in the male hospital patients than in subjects living in the community [1,581 micrograms/l (421-5,944 micrograms/l) and 448 micrograms/l (103-1,945 micrograms/l) respectively] suggested that dietary
iron overload
was not the only factor raising the serum
ferritin
concentration. The major additional factor appeared to be inflammation, since the geometric mean (SD range) serum CRP was significantly higher in male hospital patients [21 mg/l (8-53 mg/l)] than in subjects in the community [3 mg/l (1-5 mg)]. Alcohol ingestion, as judged by history and by serum GGT concentrations, was also associated with significantly raised serum
ferritin
concentrations. This finding was ascribed to the fact that traditional brews are not only associated with alcohol-induced hepatic damage but are also a very rich source of highly bio-available iron. The role of
iron overload
in the genesis of the raised serum
ferritin
concentrations are confirmed in the diagnostic liver biopsy study. The majority of biopsies showed heavy siderosis, with varying degrees of hepatic damage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dietary iron overload in southern African rural blacks. 197 6
The parenteral administration of iron-dextran complex to gerbils caused hepatic hemosiderosis and fibrosis after 6 wk. Type I and III collagen synthesis in the liver developed from perisinusoidal stellate cells that are often referred to as myofibroblasts. Immunohistologically these cells were shown to have large intracellular deposits of
ferritin
. The hepatic fibrosis appeared to be associated with aggregates of these cells rather than the aggregates of Kupffer cells, which also occur in hemosiderosis in the liver. No appreciable necrosis of hepatocytes to trigger the fibrotic response was found, so that the fibrosis appeared to be related to the accumulation of
ferritin
in the perisinusoidal stellate cells. In contrast, rats and mice did not accumulate
ferritin
in their perisinusoidal cells or develop hepatic fibrosis in response to parenterally administered iron, although they accumulated similar or greater amounts of total iron in their livers. The rapid induction of hepatic fibrosis in gerbils in response to parenterally administered iron will provide a model to investigate the mechanism of induction of collagen deposition in response to
iron overload
and a means of quickly evaluating therapeutic treatments for
iron overload
-induced fibrosis in vivo using iron-chelating drugs.
...
PMID:Rapid induction of hepatic fibrosis in the gerbil after the parenteral administration of iron-dextran complex. 199 22
The aim of this paper is to evaluate invasive and non-invasive indices of iron store and compare the effectiveness of different ferrodepletive protocols in 150 patients with porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT). Iron removal was performed either by intensive phlebotomy (22 cases) or slow subcutaneous and high intravenous doses of desferrioxamine (18 and 5 cases, respectively), and several laboratory parameters were studied; among these, oligo-elements and urinary porphyrins (detected by HPLC) were taken into account before and after the treatments. Serum iron, transferrin saturation,
ferritin
(RIA) and nuclear magnetic resonance results were compared with invasive findings in order to detect the metal deposition in liver tissue (atomic absorption concentration, optic or electron-microscopic detection). Liver
iron overload
was observed in 95% of cases. Full normalization of the disease took place by all the treatments, even if it required slightly more time in the phlebotomy group. We may conclude that ferrodepletive treatments are highly effective in PCT and, considering the fact that siderosis and liver damage always accompany the disease, these treatments are proposed as first choice in such cases.
...
PMID:Liver iron overload and desferrioxamine treatment of porphyria cutanea tarda. 201 52
In hereditary hemochromatosis (HH), increased intestinal iron absorption leads to the development of
iron overload
. To examine the abnormal regulation of iron absorption in this disorder, we analyzed mucosal iron kinetics in six patients with HH and in five normal subjects by using a compartmental model of intestinal iron absorption and systemic ferrokinetics. Subjects were given simultaneous oral and intravenous tracer doses of iron 59-labeled citrate and iron 55-labeled transferrin, respectively. Plasma and whole-body radioactive iron levels were then monitored serially during the next 2 weeks, and mucosal iron transport rate constants were estimated by non-linear least-squares fit of the model to these data. Iron absorption was inversely related to serum
ferritin
concentration in both normal subjects and patients with HH but was higher in relation to serum
ferritin
level among the latter (p less than 0.0002). Analysis of mucosal iron kinetics demonstrated a similar inverse relationship between the rate constant for mucosal iron uptake and serum
ferritin
among all subjects combined, but the mean uptake rate constant in patients with HH did not differ from that of normal subjects (p = 0.71). The mean rate constant for incorporation of iron into the mucosal storage pool in patients with HH also was comparable to that of normal subjects (p = 0.94). In contrast, the rate constant for transfer of mucosal iron to the plasma was higher in patients with HH than in normal subjects for any given serum
ferritin
level (p less than 0.0001), and the transfer rate constant accounted for 87% of the variability in iron absorption among all subjects. We conclude that the increased iron absorption in HH is mediated primarily by an increase in the rate constant for transfer of mucosal iron to the plasma.
...
PMID:Regulation of intestinal iron absorption and mucosal iron kinetics in hereditary hemochromatosis. 201 94
Forty-eight dialysis patients undergoing bone biopsy were analyzed for clinical history, blood biochemical values, bone histologic findings, bone aluminum content (BAC), bone iron content (BIC), bone iron stores, and histochemical staining of bone aluminum and bone iron. Four patients had significant trabecular bone iron staining alone; eight patients had significant bone iron and bone aluminum staining; 13 patients had significant bone aluminum staining alone; and 23 patients showed no significant bone aluminum or iron staining. Patients with significant bone iron staining were younger (37.4 +/- 5.3 years v 53.2 +/- 2.3 years, P less than 0.01, mean +/- SEM) and were more likely to be anephric (P less than 0.001) and to have a history of prior renal transplantation (P less than 0.10). The 12 patients with significant bone iron staining had received more blood transfusions than those without bone iron staining (96 +/- 22.8 U v 22 +/- 5.8 U, P less than 0.005). Patients with bone iron accumulation had higher levels of serum
ferritin
(3,594 +/- 1,138.4 micrograms/L [ng/mL] v 265 +/- 60.1 micrograms/L, P less than 0.01) and lower levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) (349 +/- 150 microLEq/mL v 1,801 +/- 397 microLEq/mL [386 +/- 166 pmol/L v 1,990 +/- 439 pmol/L], P less than 0.005). BIC was also higher in these patients (1,008 +/- 149 micrograms iron/g bone v 300 +/- 46.5 micrograms iron/g bone, P less than 0.001) and higher than normal BIC (256 +/- 44.2 micrograms iron/g bone, eight normals). Bone marrow iron stores were positively related to serum
ferritin
levels (P less than 0.01) and trabecular bone iron staining (P less than 0.10). All 13 patients with osteomalacia demonstrated significant bone aluminum staining; seven of these patients demonstrated concomitant significant iron staining. Fourteen of 15 patients with severe hyperparathyroidism showed no significant iron or aluminum staining. Our data indicate that iron will probably not accumulate within bone until all other storage sites (eg, bone marrow) are fully saturated. The presence of lower levels of iPTH in iron-overloaded patients raises the possibility that
iron overload
may induce a state of relative hypoparathyroidism. The most important determinant for the presence of osteomalacia seems to be the presence of significant aluminum staining. No specific bone histologic finding was related to the presence of bone iron staining, but the rarity of isolated significant bone iron staining makes it difficult to evaluate bone histologic diagnoses that might be solely attributable to iron.
...
PMID:Clinical and histologic features of iron-related bone disease in dialysis patients. 202 57
Itai-itai disease is thought to be the result of chronic cadmium (Cd) intoxication. We examined 23 autopsy cases of itai-itai disease and 18 cases of sudden death as controls. Urine and blood samples from 10 patients were collected before they died and revealed the presence of severe anemia and renal tubular injuries. Undecalcified sections of iliac bone were stained with Aluminon reagent, and ammonium salt of aurintricarboxylic acid, and Prussian blue reagent in all cases of itai-itai disease. These two reagents reacted at the same mineralization fronts. X-ray microanalysis revealed the presence of iron at mineralization fronts in itai-itai disease. Five patients showed evidence of hemosiderosis in the liver, spleen, and pancreas, probably as a result of post transfusion
iron overload
. Renal calculi and calcified aortic walls were also stained with Prussian blue reagent in several patients. Neither
ferritin
nor transferrin were visualized at mineralization fronts in itai-itai disease by immunohistochemical staining. These results suggest that iron is bound to calcium or to calcium phosphate by a physicochemical reaction. A marked osteomalacia was observed in 10 cases of itai-itai disease by histomorphometry. Regression analyses of data from cases of itai-itai disease suggested that an Aluminon-positive metal inhibited mineralization and that renal tubules were injured. Since bone Cd levels were increased in itai-itai disease, it is likely that renal tubules were injured by exposure to Cd. Therefore, stainable bone iron is another possible aggravating factor for osteopathy in itai-itai disease, and a synergistic effect between iron and Cd on mineralization is proposed.
...
PMID:Iron as a possible aggravating factor for osteopathy in itai-itai disease, a disease associated with chronic cadmium intoxication. 203 51
Aluminium and
iron overload
is often seen among long-term haemodialysis patients. Untreated non-de-aluminized dialysis water or the intake of large amounts of aluminium hydroxide as phosphate binders are the most common reasons for hyper-aluminaemia.
Iron overload
is mainly a result of multiple blood transfusions given to correct renal anaemia. In chronic dialysis patients, hypochromic anaemia is one of the clinical manifestations of a long-term overload of aluminium and perhaps of other metals, e.g. iron. We used deferoxamine (DFO) to chelate aluminium and excessive iron in 17 patients on chronic haemodialysis. Two grams of DFO was administered weekly in the form of an i.v. infusion during the last hour of the dialysis session. The mean serum aluminum concentration decreased from 407.3 micrograms/l to 184.2 micrograms/l within 3 years of treatment, the mean serum
ferritin
concentration from 1,563 micrograms/l to 487 micrograms/l within 2 years. Anaemia was corrected concomitantly with an increase in the haemoglobin level, which rose from 71.7 g/l to 80.8 g/l. The mean corpuscular volume increased from 83.8 fl to 91.3 fl. The need for blood transfusion also decreased significantly in all patients after the institution of DFO therapy. The clinical manifestations of aluminium and
iron overload
disappeared and the quality of life improved. No major side-effects were observed.
...
PMID:Correction of haemodialysis-associated anaemia by deferoxamine. Effects on serum aluminum and iron overload. 207 70
Iron overload
is frequently present in patients with thalassemia intermedia, and it becomes evident mainly after the second and third decades of life. The degree of the iron load is heterogeneous ranging from mild to severe. In this study we evaluated the iron status of 38 adult patients with thalassemia intermedia and we looked for factors possibly related to the observed heterogeneity of the iron status. The levels of transferrin saturation (TS), serum
ferritin
(SF) and desferrioxamine-induced urinary iron excretion (DFU) were spread in a wide range from normal to markedly increased. These indices did not correlate with other parameters such as age, hemoglobin levels and entity of the erythropoietic status. A significant difference in the degree of
iron overload
was observed between patients who underwent splenectomy and non-splenectomized patients. TS, SF and DFU were significantly higher in splenectomized than in non- splenectomized patients, indicating that the spleen could have a role in the regulation of iron metabolism in these patients.
...
PMID:Iron metabolism in thalassemia intermedia. 208 86
Six children (aged 3 years 11 months to 15 years 9 months) with end-stage renal failure and anaemia (mean haemoglobin 7.1 g/dl, range 6.3-7.7 g/dl) on thrice-weekly haemodialysis were treated with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO), given as an intravenous bolus in an escalating dose regime after dialysis. All responded with an increase in reticulocyte count and haemoglobin concentration in a mean time of 11 weeks (range 9-13 weeks) and at a dose of 100 or 150 units/kg thrice weekly. The dose of rHuEPO was then adjusted to maintain the haemoglobin concentration within the lower half of the normal range for the child's age and sex. The mean haemoglobin after 12 weeks treatment was 10.9 g/dl (range 8.5-12.1 g/dl) and after 24 weeks, 10.5 g/dl (range 7.9-13.3 g/dl). Four children had no further need for blood transfusion and are thus no longer at risk of blood-borne infection,
iron overload
and sensitisation to HLA histocompatibility antigens. Serum
ferritin
fell in the three patients with evidence of
iron overload
; the three with low or normal iron stores at the onset of treatment maintained erythropoiesis with oral iron supplementation. HLA antibodies decreased in all patients. The only serious complication encountered was thrombosis of vascular access in one child. No child became seriously hypertensive or developed cerebral symptoms. The benefits of rHuEPO therapy for children with end-stage renal failure are potentially considerable and with careful monitoring, the risks low.
...
PMID:Recombinant human erythropoietin therapy in children maintained by haemodialysis. 208 64
The incidence of bacteraemia in relation to the degree of transfusional
iron overload
was studied prospectively in patients from one haemodialysis unit over a 2-year period, with a total follow-up of 181.3 patient-years in 158 patients. Every 3 months, the patients were classified according to the serum
ferritin
in one of three groups: less than 500, 500-1000 or greater than 1000 micrograms/l. Twenty-nine episodes of bacteraemia were recorded over 181.3 patient-years (yearly incidence of 0.160). The yearly incidence of bacteraemia was 0.1173 and 0.1101 for
ferritin
less than 500 and 500-1000 micrograms/l (no significant difference), with a cumulative incidence for both groups of 0.1164. In the
ferritin
greater than 1000 micrograms/l group, the incidence was 0.3404 (P less than or equal to 0.005 versus the
ferritin
less than or equal to 1000 micrograms/l group). After stratification for patient's age (at inclusion in the study) and duration of haemodialysis therapy, the higher incidence of bacteraemia in the
ferritin
greater than 1000 versus less than or equal to 1000 micrograms/l groups persisted (P less than or equal to 0.005). This prospective study confirms previous retrospective studies in showing that acquired transfusional
iron overload
in haemodialysis is associated with a greater risk of bacteraemia.
...
PMID:Iron overload in haemodialysis patients increases the risk of bacteraemia: a prospective study. 211 11
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