Title of article
Diagnosis and management of iron-deficiency anaemia
Author/Authors
James D. Cook، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
14
From page
319
To page
332
Abstract
Anaemia is typically the first clue to iron deficiency, but an isolated haemoglobin measurement has both low specificity and low sensitivity. The latter can be improved by including measures of iron-deficient erythropoiesis such as the transferrin iron saturation, mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration, erythrocyte zinc protoporphyrin, percentage of hypochromic erythrocytes or reticulocyte haemoglobin concentration. However, the changes in these measurements with iron deficiency are indistinguishable from those seen in patients with the anaemia of chronic disease. The optimal diagnostic approach is to measure the serum ferritin as an index of iron stores and the serum transferrin receptor as a index of tissue iron deficiency. The treatment of iron deficiency should always be initiated with oral iron. When this fails because of large blood losses, iron malabsorption, or intolerance to oral iron, parenteral iron can be given using iron dextran, iron gluconate or iron sucrose.
Keywords
transferrin receptor , Ferritin , Iron deficiency , iron-deficient erythropoiesis , parenteral iron.
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Haematology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Haematology
Record number
467617
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