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S Hemochromatosis By: Matthew Casello

Hemochromatosis

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Hemochromatosis. By: Matthew Casello. Definition. Too much iron in the body Referred to as “Iron Overload ”. Statistics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Hemochromatosis

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HemochromatosisBy: Matthew Casello

Page 2: Hemochromatosis

Definition

Too much iron in the body Referred to as “Iron Overload”

Page 3: Hemochromatosis

Statistics

Most common genetic disorder in the United States. It effects 33.5 million Americans where 32 million are silent carriers. That leads 1.5 million people with the expressed homozygous gene. (Center for Disease Control)

Page 4: Hemochromatosis

Two Types

Primary (most common form)- Genetic disorder passed down where too much iron is absorbed in the digestive track. Iron builds up in the vascular organs of the body especially the liver. A C282Y mutation in the HFE gene.

Secondary (acquired)- not very common but occurs when someone has to many blood transfusions or alcoholism.

Page 5: Hemochromatosis

Irish Population

It is believed that Hemochromatosis’s origin dates back 40,000 years from a single person in Ireland. This person’s genes mutated so that he/she could over-absorb iron to compensate for an iron poor diet.

Irish, Scottish and British heritage have higher chances of carrying the mutated gene.

Page 6: Hemochromatosis

Symptoms/Treatment

Symptoms- abdominal pain, fatigue, bronze skin color and join pain are the most common.

Treatment- Removing excess iron from the body and treating any organ damage from the excess iron. Treatment is best when treated early before build up of iron occurs in organ tissues.

Page 7: Hemochromatosis

Phlebotomy

Removing a half liter of blood from that patient every week until the levels return to normal. After normal levels occur that patent will be bleed less often to maintain iron levels.

Page 8: Hemochromatosis

Why too much iron is bad

Iron promotes generation of free radicals that can lead to mutagenesis, atherosclerosis, inflammation and bacterial growth.

Page 9: Hemochromatosis

Alcohol/Smoking Effect

Increases iron absorption Puts a further stress on the liver Smoking contains high levels of iron that is

directly absorbed upon inhalation.

Page 10: Hemochromatosis

Vitamin C

Enhances that absorption of Iron . Should not be taken in supplemental form but

should not be eliminated from diet. Stay away from the many processed foods

enhanced with Vitamin C.

Page 11: Hemochromatosis

Gender

Women accumulate iron at a slower rate then men because of the loss of iron from menstruation and breastfeeding.

They develop signs and symptoms of organ damage 10 years later than men.