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Article ID # 20041610
Iron: The Body's LifeBlood
by Carl Lowe
Energy Times, October 16, 2004
Two billion people, including one in 10 American women, are lacking iron.
Here's how veggies and other foods can supply you with enough of this vital
mineral.
Back in the days of black and white television, a popular commercial cautioned
viewers about the dangers of iron-poor blood. While those ads trumpeting the
debilitating fatigue of iron deficiency have disappeared from our colorized
video world, medical researchers now recognize that many of us, in fact, are
hampered by an iron shortage. What those old ads missed: a lack of iron can
slow you down mentally and physically even before it shows up in your blood.
A Woman's Dilemma: Hidden Deficiencies
Experts estimate that one in 10 American women are low in iron but many haven't
become so deficient that they are aware of their shortage. In other countries,
up to eight in 10 women run short on iron. While researchers once believed
that iron deficiency was only serious if it was drastic enough to cause anemia
(what used to be called "tired blood"), studies now show that even
mild deficiencies can compromise health.
Worldwide, public health experts believe that the lives of about 2 billion
people are affected by iron deficiency. Most of these people are women, who
lose blood on a monthly basis during their childbearing years. Men are generally
not low in iron.
Iron is necessary for the formation of red blood cells-particularly the creation
of hemoglobin, the reddish pigment in these cells that enables them to deliver
oxygen to muscles and other bodily tissues. If you are very low in iron, the
resulting anemia leaves you feeling fatigued.
Your body stashes iron not only in your blood cells, but in your liver and
other tissues as well. When you don't consume enough iron, first your liver
stores decrease, then your tissue supplies disappear and, finally, your blood
runs low and you develop anemia.
Early on in the iron-depletion process, a low iron count won't make your daily
activities more difficult. Cornell University researchers found, in experiments
on women who were mildly depleted, that taking or not taking iron supplements
had no effect on how these women felt while exercising.
"
Supplementation makes no difference in exercise-training improvements in women
with low iron storage who are not yet tissue-iron deficient or anemic," says
Thomas Brownlie, one of the Cornell researchers.
Supplementing Your Supply
Even in the beginning stages of iron deficiency, however, experts still believe
you should take supplements: an uncorrected iron shortage can mean serious
problems lurk ahead (American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 5/04).
For that reason, the next time you visit your healthcare practitioner you should
request a serum transferrin receptor concentration test, which can detect an
early iron shortage. (Don't start taking iron supplements without consulting
a knowledgeable medical professional.)
"
It would be useful for women who test low for iron but who are not yet anemic
to have this test," notes Cornell's Brownlie. "Women found to be
tissue-iron deficient will find exercise exceedingly difficult without improving
their iron status-which could be achieved by increasing consumption of iron-rich
foods or iron supplementation."
Iron-Poor Blood
If you let your iron levels run down so low that it shows up as anemia, not
only will you be tired but your thinking may be fogged as well. "
Millions of women who are mildly iron deficient must work harder than necessary
when exercising or working physically, and they can't reap the benefits of
endurance training very easily," says Jere Haas, PhD, one of the researchers
involved in these studies and a nutrition professor at Cornell. "As a
result, exercise is more difficult so these women are more apt to lose their
motivation to exercise."
Meanwhile, researchers at Wake Forest University in North Carolina report that,
as you age, anemia can make you more vulnerable to disabilities while weakening
your muscles and draining your strength (Journal of the American Geriatric
Society 5/04). That type of anemia may be linked to shortages of both iron
and vitamin B12.
"
Our results suggest that anemia is a risk factor for disability, poor physical
function and low muscle strength-all which can threaten the independence of
older adults," says Brenda Penninx, PhD, lead researcher. If you are a
woman who exercises frequently, cuts calories to lose weight or eats a mostly
vegetarian diet, watch out-you may be at high risk for iron depletion.
To steer clear of iron shortages, the Cornell researchers recommend eating
lean red meat. If you are a vegetarian, taking vitamin C with meals improves
your iron absorption from iron-rich foods like peanuts, whole wheat, brown
rice and leafy green vegetables, as does using iron cookware.
Chelated Minerals
When it comes to absorbing supplemental minerals like iron, not all minerals
may be created equal. In particular, minerals that are in chelated form are
generally believed to be absorbed more efficiently in your digestive system.
The word "chelate" comes from the Greek word for claw. Chelated minerals
are chemically implanted into proteins known as peptides. This bound molecular
structure mirrors the way minerals are contained in natural whole foods, which
have been found to contain their own natural chelates.
Chelated minerals are more well-suited to your digestive tract. A key advantage
of chelated formulations is their stability after you swallow them. Many other
forms of supplemental minerals-which are often combined with inorganic salts
or organic acids-may be broken down prematurely in the digestive tract, leading
to poor absorption and a stomachache.
Chelates, however, maintain their structure sufficiently to reach the spot
in the digestive tract where they are most efficiently taken into the bloodstream.
Once there, the body's digestive enzymes dismember the proteins and convert
the minerals into absorbable form.
Getting enough iron and other minerals is not that difficult a task-it's just
one that is too often overlooked. But if you pride yourself on your iron will
or iron constitution, or just seek to iron out a few of the kinks in your health,
you may need to significantly pump up your iron.
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