Is that Iron Supplement Making Your IBD Patient Ill?

Iron replacement therapy is a common treatment in patients with anaemia and Crohn’s disease, but oral iron supplements are less tolerated. The pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease is attributed to intestinal bacteria and environmental factors that trigger disease in a genetically predisposed host. The aim of this study was to characterise the interrelationship between luminal iron sulfate, systemic iron, the gut microbiota and the development of chronic ileitis in a murine model of Crohn’s disease.[1]

What is already known about this subject?

What are the new findings?

How might it impact on clinical practice in the foreseeable future?

Comment

Many practitioners will already have experienced the deleterious effects of standard iron supplementation from the GP – Iron sulphate is well known for inducing constipation and bowel distress – yet it is cheap and easily prescribed. Most Nutritional Therapists and observant clinicians have found that an alternative form of iron if often better absorbed and has no adverse effects. There are a number of alternative to sulphate such as citrate or gluconate to consider before systemic supplementation.

So keep in mind that if your IBD patient presents with increasingly unpleasant relapses and is also anaemic – check their iron supplements and change them or refer for systemic supplementation.

Reference


[1] Werner T, Wagner SJ, Depletion of luminal iron alters the gut microbiota and prevents Crohn’s disease-like ileitis. Martínez I, Walter J, Chang JS, Clavel T, Kisling S, Schuemann K, Haller D. Gut. 2010 Nov 12. View Abstract

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