Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During male puberty, rapid growth of body mass and the rise in hemoglobin concentration require much iron. The increasing need for iron may carry a risk of iron deficiency. Criteria for iron deficiency in adolescence are difficult to assess, as indicated by prevalences ranging from 0.5 to 30% in five recent studies from developed countries. We followed 60 prepubertal or early pubertal boys, testing them at 6-month intervals for 24 months and relating hemoglobin levels and other iron parameters to age, pubertal development, and response to iron medication. A significant increase in mean hemoglobin was first seen at genital stage G4. In early puberty, in contrast, between stages G1 and G3, ferritin decreased. Mean transferrin increased slightly during the study. The prevalence of iron deficiency increased both with age and with advancing puberty. However, the early decline in ferritin may be a physiologic response to guarantee increasing intestinal absorption. After iron medication, we observed improvements in the levels of our parameters of iron status, which showed that hemoglobin levels had been limited by iron deficiency. In pubertal boys, evaluation of iron deficiency should not be based on laboratory parameters alone; age, pubertal development, and growth should also be taken into account.
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PMID:Development of iron status and response to iron medication in pubertal boys. 870 87

During male puberty, erythropoiesis is exceptionally active. Pubertal development and iron status were followed in 60 healthy boys at 3-month intervals for 24 months to evaluate changes in body iron stores with the serum transferrin receptor-ferritin ratio. The estimated amount of stored iron declined by about 50% over a 2-year period. Remarkable changes in iron stores were found even after as short an interval as 3 months and pubertal development was closely linked with a decrease in stored iron. The annual increments of estimated red blood cell (RBC) iron showed strong positive correlations with velocities in testicular volume and certainly in body height and weight. In contrast, the estimated changes in individual iron stores were not associated with any of those parameters. The lacking associations between iron stores and growth parameters are probably indicative of increasing intestinal absorption. Despite the relatively small quantitative role of iron stores in supplying iron for growth, falling iron stores probably play a more important regulatory role by stimulating iron absorption.
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PMID:Body iron stores in relation to growth and pubertal maturation in healthy boys. 901 83