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Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm.
Nutrients. 2018 Dec 11; 10(12)N

Abstract

Iron plays a key role in many physiological processes; cells need a very exact quantity of iron. In patients with inflammatory bowel disease, anaemia is a unique example of multifactorial origins, frequently being the result of a combination of iron deficiency and anaemia of chronic disease. The main cause of iron deficiency is the activity of the disease. Therefore, the first aim should be to reach complete clinical remission. The iron supplementation route should be determined according to symptoms, severity of anaemia and taking into account comorbidities and individual risks. Oral iron can only be used in patients with mild anaemia, whose disease is inactive and who have not been previously intolerant to oral iron. Intravenous iron should be the first line treatment in patients with moderate-severe anaemia, in patients with active disease, in patients with poor tolerance to oral iron and when erythropoietin agents or a fast response is needed. Erythropoietin is used in a few patients with anaemia to overcome functional iron deficiency, and blood transfusion is being restricted to refractory cases or acute life-threatening situations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Digestive Diseases Service, Hospital Clínico Universitario "Lozano Blesa", Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. carlajerusalen@hotmail.com. IIS Aragón, Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. carlajerusalen@hotmail.com.Digestive Diseases Service, Hospital Clínico Universitario "Lozano Blesa", Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. ealfambra.due@gmail.com. IIS Aragón, Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. ealfambra.due@gmail.com.Blood and Tissue Bank of Navarra, Pamplona, 31008 Navarra, España. jagarciaerce@gmail.com.Digestive Diseases Service, Hospital Clínico Universitario "Lozano Blesa", Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. fgomollon@gmail.com. IIS Aragón, Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. fgomollon@gmail.com. School of Medicine, University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, 50009 Aragón, Spain. fgomollon@gmail.com. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas, CIBEREH, 28029 Madrid, Spain. fgomollon@gmail.com.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

30544934

Citation

Gargallo-Puyuelo, Carla J., et al. "Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm." Nutrients, vol. 10, no. 12, 2018.
Gargallo-Puyuelo CJ, Alfambra E, García-Erce JA, et al. Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm. Nutrients. 2018;10(12).
Gargallo-Puyuelo, C. J., Alfambra, E., García-Erce, J. A., & Gomollon, F. (2018). Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm. Nutrients, 10(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10121959
Gargallo-Puyuelo CJ, et al. Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm. Nutrients. 2018 Dec 11;10(12) PubMed PMID: 30544934.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Iron Treatment May Be Difficult in Inflammatory Diseases: Inflammatory Bowel Disease as a Paradigm. AU - Gargallo-Puyuelo,Carla J, AU - Alfambra,Erika, AU - García-Erce,Jose Antonio, AU - Gomollon,Fernando, Y1 - 2018/12/11/ PY - 2018/11/02/received PY - 2018/12/05/revised PY - 2018/12/07/accepted PY - 2018/12/15/entrez PY - 2018/12/14/pubmed PY - 2019/2/23/medline KW - inflammatory bowel disease KW - intravenous iron KW - iron deficiency KW - iron deficiency anemia KW - oral iron JF - Nutrients JO - Nutrients VL - 10 IS - 12 N2 - Iron plays a key role in many physiological processes; cells need a very exact quantity of iron. In patients with inflammatory bowel disease, anaemia is a unique example of multifactorial origins, frequently being the result of a combination of iron deficiency and anaemia of chronic disease. The main cause of iron deficiency is the activity of the disease. Therefore, the first aim should be to reach complete clinical remission. The iron supplementation route should be determined according to symptoms, severity of anaemia and taking into account comorbidities and individual risks. Oral iron can only be used in patients with mild anaemia, whose disease is inactive and who have not been previously intolerant to oral iron. Intravenous iron should be the first line treatment in patients with moderate-severe anaemia, in patients with active disease, in patients with poor tolerance to oral iron and when erythropoietin agents or a fast response is needed. Erythropoietin is used in a few patients with anaemia to overcome functional iron deficiency, and blood transfusion is being restricted to refractory cases or acute life-threatening situations. SN - 2072-6643 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/30544934/full_citation DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -