Split Daily Oral Iron Dosing Enhances Correction of Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Rats
Mohamed M. El-Kady, Nermeen Bastawy, Mohamed Amin, Soha Elmorsy, Olfat Shaker, Abeer Mostafa, Eman Hassan Nadwa, Marwa Abdel-Rahman

TL;DR
Splitting daily iron doses improves anemia correction in rats compared to a single dose.
Contribution
Divided iron dosing enhances short-term correction of iron-deficiency anemia in rats.
Findings
Divided iron doses improved hemoglobin and hematocrit more than single doses.
Multiple smaller doses increased iron bioavailability in anemic rats.
Short-term treatment with divided doses showed better anemia correction.
Abstract
Iron deficiency is the leading cause of anemia worldwide. Single oral iron daily supplementation is usually unsatisfactory. We hypothesize dividing the oral iron dose may improve the anemic parameters. To test this hypothesis, forty male Wistar rats were evenly assigned to the following groups (n = 8): Control nonanemic or anemic groups. Anemia was induced by repeated phlebotomy from the orbital plexus under anesthesia for 4 weeks. The anemic rats either received no treatment (IDA group) or received a total oral iron supplementation (7.1 mg/kg/day) for 1 week. Iron was administered in different treatment regimens: single dose per day (IDA-Fe-sid group), twice per day (IDA-Fe-bid group), or thrice per day (IDA-Fe-tid group). The hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit values, total iron-binding capacity (TIBC), and serum levels of iron, ferritin, and hepcidin were measured to assess the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIron Metabolism and Disorders · Hemoglobinopathies and Related Disorders · Trace Elements in Health
