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American Academy of Pediatrics
Article

Effect of Iron Therapy on Behavior Performance in Nonanemic, Iron-Deficient Infants

Frank A. Oski, Alice S. Honig, Brenda Helu and Peter Howanitz
Pediatrics June 1983, 71 (6) 877-880;
Frank A. Oski
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Alice S. Honig
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Brenda Helu
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Peter Howanitz
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Abstract

In an effort to determine whether iron deficiency, in the absence of anemia (hemoglobin >11.0 g/dL), might produce alterations in behavioral development, four groups of nonanemic infants, 9 to 12 months of age, with varying degrees of iron deficiency were studied. Infants were classified as iron sufficient, iron depleted, or iron deficient based on measurements of serum ferritin concentration, erythrocyte protoporphyrin values, and the mean cell volume of erythrocytes. Subjects in each group were tested with the Bayley Mental Development Index, treated with parenteral iron, and retested seven days later. The administration of iron produced a significant increase in the Mental Development Index scores (+21.6 points) in the infants with iron deficiency but no significant change in the scores of infants with iron sufficiency (+6.2 points) or only iron depletion (+5.6 points). It is concluded that iron deficiency, even in the absence of anemia, results in biochemical alterations that impair behavior in infants.

  • iron deficiency
  • behavior
  • Bayley Scales of Mental Development
  • Received July 12, 1982.
  • Accepted January 18, 1983.
  • Copyright © 1983 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
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Pediatrics
Vol. 71, Issue 6
1 Jun 1983
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Effect of Iron Therapy on Behavior Performance in Nonanemic, Iron-Deficient Infants
Frank A. Oski, Alice S. Honig, Brenda Helu, Peter Howanitz
Pediatrics Jun 1983, 71 (6) 877-880;

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Effect of Iron Therapy on Behavior Performance in Nonanemic, Iron-Deficient Infants
Frank A. Oski, Alice S. Honig, Brenda Helu, Peter Howanitz
Pediatrics Jun 1983, 71 (6) 877-880;
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