SleepCited

Iron deficiency: beyond anemia.

Dinesh Yadav, Jagdish Chandra
Review Indian journal of pediatrics 2011 75 citations

Study Design

Study Type
Review
Population
General population including children under 2 years; review of non-anemic manifestations of iron deficiency
Intervention
Iron deficiency: beyond anemia.
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
Non-anemic effects of iron deficiency on tissues, organs, and systems
Effect Direction
Negative
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional disorder affecting at least one third of world's population. Though anemia is common manifestation of iron deficiency, other effects of iron deficiency on various tissues, organs and systems are usually under recognized. Impaired brain development and cognitive, behavioural and psychomotor impairment are most worrisome manifestations of iron deficiency. Studies have demonstrated that some of these changes occurring during period of brain growth spurt (<2 years age) may be irreversible. Association of iron deficiency with febrile seizures, pica, breath holding spells, restless leg syndrome and thrombosis is increasingly being recognized. Impaired cell-mediated immunity and bactericidal function are generally noted in iron-deficient persons; however, the findings are inconsistent. Despite proven reversible functional immunological defects in vitro studies, a clinically important relationship between states of iron deficiency and susceptibility to infections remains controversial. Studies from malaria endemic regions have reported increased incidence of malaria in association with iron supplementation. These and some other aspects of iron deficiency are reviewed in this article.

TL;DR

Despite proven reversible functional immunological defects in vitro studies, a clinically important relationship between states of iron deficiency and susceptibility to infections remains controversial.

Used In Evidence Reviews