1. Parenteral iron increases serum erythropoietin concentration during the ‘early anaemia’ of 10–20‐day‐old mice
- Author
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Sverre Halvorsen and Bechensteen Ag
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ratón ,Iron ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mice ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Weaning ,Infusions, Parenteral ,Erythropoietin ,Saline ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Chemotherapy ,Anemia, Iron-Deficiency ,business.industry ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Iron-deficiency anemia ,Immunology ,Erythropoiesis ,Female ,business ,Parenteral iron ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Parenteral iron abolishes the ‘early anaemia’ in all mammals tested and increases packed cell volume (PCV) and haemoglobin concentration (Hb) significantly above adult levels. In the present study we examined the effect of parenteral iron upon serum immunoreactive erythropoietin (siEpo) concentration in young mice (age 6–24 d) and in adult iron-deficient mice. Young BALB/CJ mice, from 5 to 23 d of age, and adult (60–100 d old) mice, some of which were iron deficient due to a low iron diet from the time of weaning, were given iron subcutaneously (iron sorbitol, Fe+++, 1.2 mg iron/100 g body weight/injection). Iron was given as one single dose and the animals killed 20–24 h later. Control mice were similarly treated with saline. In young mice, from the age 10 d to weaning at 20 d, the siEpo level, measured 20–24 h after a single subcutaneous dose of iron, was 5 times greater than that in control mice (P
- Published
- 1996
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