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28
"The
Shocking Truth About Iron"
A
Million Americans have a potentially fatal
disease--iron overload. So why are we still
focused on deficiency?
by
Steven Finch
The
oft-repeated first law of modern medical
diagnosis is that when you hear hoofbeats,
think horses not zebras. So in 1951, when
19-year old Roberta Crawford complained
of constant fatigue and lingering flu symptoms,
her doctor took one look at her pale skin
and thin frame and heard the clipperty-clop
of iron deficiency anemia. He sent her
off with a prescription for a new iron
supplement called Trinsicon. "At first
it seemed to help," Crawford recalls, "but
then I'd get clobbered by the flu again,
only worse." She started with a single
capsule each day, but when her doctors
noted that the Trinsicon wasn't curbing
her anemia, they bolstered the dose. by
the time Crawford was up to five pills
a day, she'd become disabled from sheer
exhaustion. "I knew I didn't want
the iron," she says, "but when
I asked one doctor if I could give it up,
he said, 'No. It's crucial for your life.
You have to keep taking it forever.'"
Crawford
took iron for her "deficiency" for
the next 27 years. Then in 1978, Crawford's
swollen liver led her gastroenterologist
to make a lifesaving diagnosis. To the
GI, a distended liver, coupled with her
symptoms of fatigue and flu, sounded a
lot like cancer. He ordered a biopsy. The
liver sample came back clean, except that
it was brimming with iron. He then ordered
a series of blood tests, including one
to determine her levels of the iron-binding
protein, ferritin. Healthy adults have
up to 160 grams in a deciliter of blood.
A measure of 300 grams can indicate advanced
iron overload. Roberta Crawford's ferritin
approached 7,000. "You have an interesting,
rare disease," her doctor told her. "Hemochromatosis".
The
GI was right about the diagnosis, but he
was off the mark about its frequency. A
hereditary disease in which the intestine
absorbs excess iron, hemochromatosis is,
in fact, the most common and one of the
most misunderstood--and most underdiagnosed--genetic
disorders in the country. The hemochromatosis
gene is 30 times more prevalent than the
gene for Duchenne muscular dystrophy and
occurs far more frequently than the genes
for either Down syndrome, cerebral palsy,
or cystic fibrosis. All told, more than
a million Americans (about one out of every
250) suffer from hemochromatosis. And that's
not counting the gene in the Americans
(fully 23 million) who are carriers of
the genes for the disease.
Normally,
healthy people absorb about 10 percent
of the iron in the foods they eat. Carriers,
who have only one of the two hemochromatosis
genes, can absorb half-again that much,
while Crawford and others with full-blown
hemochromatosis can soak in up to 20 percent
or more. Since the body has no natural
way of excreting iron (other than through
a woman's menses and the minuscule amounts
everyone sloughs off in dead skin), any
extra iron that's absorbed is relentlessly
dumped into tissues and vital organs, especially
the heart, liver, and pancreas. The good
news is that, if hemochromatosis is discovered
early, phlebotomies, or bloodletting, will
entirely prevent illness associated with
the disease. But left unchecked, excess
iron can turn the skin a coppery, bronze,
or grayish color and clog vital internal
organs to such an extent that initial,
vague ailments such as stomach pain and
fatigue can develop into arthritis, diabetes,
cancer, heart disease, cirrhosis of the
liver, and a host of other ills.
Unfortunately,
iron overload is left unchecked all too
often. Surveys of hemochromatosis patients
conducted in 1985 and 1988 by the Iron
Overload Diseases Association found that
the average patient had to wait more than
five years before being properly diagnosed.
Most of those surveyed had consulted multiple
doctors; 25 percent of them also had a
type of anemia unrelated to iron status
and, like Crawford, were actually first
prescribed iron before anyone successfully
diagnosed their hemochromatosis.
Given
iron overload's prevalence and seriousness,
why the long delay? For one thing, say
a group of health experts who are trying
to raise physicians' awareness, symptoms,
such as fatigue and pain in the joints,
are fairly nonspecific. For another, our
decades-old preoccupation with iron deficiency
anemia has too often led medical schools--and
therefore the medical profession--to focus
attention on the benefits of iron at the
expense of its dangers.
Even
today, says Kenneth Bridges, an assistant
professor of medicine at Harvard who has
spent the last 15 years researching iron's
effects on the body, most doctors aren't
taught enough. "A lot of medical schools
still only skim over iron deficiency and
don't even touch on hemochromatosis except
to say that it's a rare iron disease that
yellows the skin," he says. As a result,
despite more than a million people at serious
risk, hemochromatosis remains an invisible
problem. Lack of physician awareness, Bridges
says, extends even to his own clinical
affiliation, Harvard's prestigious Brigham
and Women's Hospital in Boston.
Iron
is, of course, essential to life. Skimp
on iron and the result is anemia, a condition
that decreases hemoglobin in the blood,
which in turn, cheats the body of enough
oxygen for proper growth and functioning.
Sic percent of Americans--almost exclusively
infants, adolescents, and women in their
childbearing years--need additional iron.
It's
known, for example, that while adequate
iron is vital to healthy pregnancies, about
20 percent of women of child-bearing age
are iron deficient. Numerous studies have
confirmed that low iron stores in children
can impair physical and mental development.
That's an alarming fact when you consider
that, according to a 1994 Johns Hopkins
study, at least 15 percent of all adolescent
girls have some form of iron deficiency.
But
as a group, Americans are in much more
danger from overloading on iron than from
getting too little. For one thing, although
iron deficiency is the most common reason
for anemia, it's far from being the only
one. Anemias are caused by everything from
vitamin deficiencies to defects in the
hemoglobin itself or in the bone marrow's
production of red blood cells. That distinction
isn't always clearly understood. Like Crawford
(whose anemia turned out to stem from insufficient
vitamin B-12), many anemic patients are
prescribed iron as a matter of course,
sometimes with drastic consequences.
William
Crosby, a former director of hematology
at the Chapman Cancer Center in Joplin,
Missouri, calls iron deficiency anemia
a "nothing problem"--a statement
that puts him at odds with many in the
medical community.
"What
I mean is that although a lot of women
have iron deficiency anemia and are worn
down and fatigued by it, their deficiency
doesn't kill them, " says the 30-year
military veteran, who introduced hematology
as a specialty to the Army Medical Corps. "Iron
overload is lethal."
Hematologist
Victor Herbert, a professor of medicine
at Mount Sinai and Bronx Veteran's Affairs
Medical Centers in New York City, and one
of the world's foremost experts on nutrition,
echoes Crosby's concern. Except for high-risk
groups like children and premenopausal
women, it's pretty tough for other Americans
to come up iron deficient, he says. Not
only is iron abundant in unprocessed meat
and vegetables, but since the early 1940's
the FDA has required that virtually all
four products be iron- enriched. so while
in the rest of the world more than a billion
people are iron-deficient, in this country
you can't trip over a Twinkie without getting
metal shavings on your sneakers. In fact,
Americans who need extra iron are outnumbered
nearly 20 to one by those who don't. Nevertheless,
tens of millions of Americans regularly
supplement their diets with multivitamins,
minerals, or other iron products because
they believe it will keep them healthier.
Worse,
doctors frequently prescribe iron without
fully diagnosing the cause of a patient's
anemia or ruling out iron overload. "It
happens all the time," says Herbert. "And
that's just plain dangerous. No one should
take a supplement without having their
iron status checked." Most hemochromatosis
carriers, for example, will live full,
healthy lives despite absorbing twice as
much iron as the average person. "But
give carriers a bunch of multivitamins
or a string of iron supplements like Geritol," says
Herbert, "and you're going to throw
them into iron overload too." The
bottom line, he adds, is that people who
take iron are twice as likely to be hurt
by a supplement as they are to be helped
by it.
What's
needed, Herbert and his colleagues maintain,
is a sharp increase in doctors' awareness
of how serious a problem hemochromatosis
is as well as universal screening for patients'
iron status. The old definition for hemochromatosis
won't do anymore, says David Witte, a University
of Iowa pathologist who's written new guidelines
on hemochromatosis due out sometime in
early 1996. (See additional information
attached to this article on how to order
a copy of these guidelines).
"We
have to move beyond thinking about this
disease as a liver malady in old men," Witte
says. "For one thing, the condition
affects as many women as men. Women just
have an early advantage, which they lose
after menopause." For another, he
adds, we're doing patients an inexcusable
disservice by refusing to recognize hemochromatosis
as a chronic, genetic disorder that makes
people absorb excess iron. Using this new
definition, he says, the challenge becomes
to find these people and treat them before
their excess iron causes complications.
"If
you don't look for hemochromatosis until
a patient displays clinical symptoms or
until a liver biopsy turns up full of iron," Bridges
says, "too much damage has already
been done."
Screening
would go a long way in reducing such damage,
Witte and other experts insist. "People
are getting bounced around from doctor
to doctor, suffering from fatigue or headaches,
and no one thinks to check for iron overload," Witte
says. "A few patients are still being
sent to psychiatrists, because their doctors
pass them off as hypochondriacs."
Roberta
Crawford remembers when doctors told her
she was crazy. Now 63 and quite sane, Crawford's
only concessions to iron overload are phlebotomies
once or twice a year and regular yoga and
swimming to ease her nagging arthritis.
But she's come to realize how lucky she
is to have survived her condition relatively
unscathed. Since starting the Iron Overload
Diseases Association in 1981, Crawford
has met or talked to the families of hundreds
of seemingly healthy people--many who'd
never taken an iron supplement--who became
permanently disabled or died in their thirties
or forties, a few even younger. Crawford
and her association have been trying to
educate both doctors and the public alike
about the need to know their iron status.
A second goal is to convince public health
officials that it's worth the cost to screen
seemingly healthy patients for a hidden
disease.
Managed
care giant Kaiser Permanente may already
be convinced. At Kaiser San Diego, home
of the country's single largest preventive
medicine program, doctors in its department
of preventive medicine are testing the
iron status of every patient they see (until
they reach 30,000). So far, of the approximately
8,000 patients they've tested, about one
out of every 250 has had hemochromatosis.
Most have been treated. That's fine for
a relatively few southern California patients,
says Bridges, but until screening becomes
universal, it's up to individual practitioners
to decide. "Look at it this way," he
says. "There just aren't many diseases
out there that a million Americans have.
And while there's nothing you and I can
do about advanced colon cancer or diabetic
end stage renal disease, we can save a
whole lot of people from hemochromatosis.
Appendix
"Practice
Parameter for Hereditary Hemochromatosis," David
L. Witte et al., in press, College of American
Pathologists, Northfield, Illinois.
"Diagnosis
and Treatment of Iron Disorders," Victor
Herbert et al., Hospital Practice Symposium
Supplement, Vol. 26, Supplement 3, 1991.
The
Iron Elephant: What You Should Know About
the Dangers of Excess Body Iron, Roberta
Crawford, Glyndon, Maryland: Vida Publishing,
Inc. 1992.
National
Heart Lung and Blood Institute Information
Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
FERROUS
FABLES: EIGHT MYTHS ABOUT IRON
Anyone
whose family had a television probably
grew up watching Popeye-the pipe-smoking,
pip-squeak of a sailor who could transform
his sagging biceps into twin turbines with
a few gulps of iron-rich spinach. Well,
Popeye lied. Extra iron, whether from spinach
or supplements, doesn't make us any stronger,
smarter, faster, or more attractive. Here
are some other common ironclad misconceptions.