Influence of mild infections on iron status parameters in women of reproductive age

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Abstract

Objective -To investigate the effects of mild infections on iron status parameters. Design - A prospective observational study. Setting - A population of female nurse students in Norway. Subjects - 33 women with self-reported episodes of infection and 33 women without infections but with comparable s-ferritin at baseline. Main outcome measures - Change from baseline in haemoglobin, s-iron, TIBC, transferrin saturation, s-ferritin, e-protoporphyrin and s-transferrin receptor on days 3, 7, 14, 21, 28 and 56 after onset of illness, compared to changes in non-infected subjects tested in parallel. Results - In febrile illness, such as influenza, there was a significant rise in s-ferritin that could take more than a month to normalise. S-ferritin increased significantly when CRP rose above 20 mg/L, but a normal CRP could not preclude falsely high s-ferritin values due to infection. S-iron and transferrin saturation fell below normal range in a substantial proportion of cases in the symptomatic stage, even in infections without a febrile response, such as the common cold, but was normalised within a week after onset of infection. Conclusion - For more than a month after febrile illness such as influenza, s-ferritin is not a reliable measure for ruling out iron deficiency in women of reproductive age.

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Eskeland, B., Baerheim, A., Ulvik, R., & Hunskaar, S. (2002). Influence of mild infections on iron status parameters in women of reproductive age. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 20(1), 50–56. https://doi.org/10.1080/028134302317282752

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