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Journal ArticleDOI

Ferritin as an index of bone marrow iron stores.

Rodney Nelson, +3 more
- 01 Dec 1978 - 
- Vol. 71, Iss: 12, pp 1482-1484
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TLDR
A useful clinical rule seems to be that serum ferritin of greater than 100 ng/ml tends to exclude iron deficiency, and a level of less than 30 ng/ ml tends to confirm decreased iron stores.
Abstract
We examined the relationship of serum ferritin to bone marrow iron stores in 73 anemic male medical inpatients with liver disease, alcoholism, chronic inflammatory disease, and malignancies. A correlation of r = 0.75 (P less than .00005) was found between serum ferritin and bone marrow iron stores (BMIS) for the entire group. Liver disease as manifested clinically or by increased levels of serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase did not appear to significantly affect this relationship. Patients with folic acid deficiency did tend to have a disproportionate increase in ferritin in relation to BMIS, but this did not seem to destroy the usefulness of ferritin levels. A useful clinical rule seems to be that serum ferritin of greater than 100 ng/ml tends to exclude iron deficiency, and a level of less than 30 ng/ml tends to confirm decreased iron stores.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Laboratory diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia: an overview.

TL;DR: Serum ferritin radioimmunoassay is an extremely powerful test for the diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia and, appropriately interpreted, can be applied to the complete range of patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iron and diabetes risk.

TL;DR: Iron plays a direct and causal role in diabetes pathogenesis mediated both by β cell failure and insulin resistance and regulates metabolism in most tissues involved in fuel homeostasis, with the adipocyte in particular serving an iron-sensing role.
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Diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia in the elderly.

TL;DR: In this article, the value of serum ferritin, mean cell volume, transferrin saturation, and free erythrocyte protoporphyrin in the diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia in the elderly was determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is the evidence for gender differences in ferritin and haemoglobin

TL;DR: It appears that lower haemoglobin and ferritin values in menstruating women have been accepted as normal rather than possibly representing widespread iron deficiency, and reference ranges should be re-evaluated in populations proven to be iron replete.
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