Merkel Drorit, Huerta Michael, Grotto Itamar, Blum Dalit, Rachmilewitz Eliezer, Fibach Eitan, Epstein Yoram, Shpilberg Ofer
Institute of Hematology, Sheba Medical Center, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
J Adolesc Health. 2009 Sep;45(3):286-91. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2009.02.003. Epub 2009 May 30.
Combat soldiers have a higher prevalence of anemia than age- and gender-matched civilians. This may be caused by hemodilution, which is typical among athletes, or by reduced body iron stores. The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence of iron-deficiency anemia in recruits to the Israel Defense Force after 6 months of training.
Blood was collected from recruits before training. After 6 months of follow-up, 153 paired blood samples were collected from the initial cohort. Total blood count and serum iron, transferrin, and ferritin were measured at both time points. Soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) was measured in 119 of the paired samples and the sTfR/log ferritin ratio was calculated.
At recruitment, mean hemoglobin concentration was 14.7 +/- .9 g/dl. Iron-transferrin saturation was 34.1% +/- 13.6%, and mean ferritin concentration was 53.6 +/- 33.2 ng/ml. Anemia prevalence (Hb <14 g/dl) was 17.6%, and 14.9% of participants were iron-deficient (ferritin <22 mg/dl). At 6 months, 50.3% of the cohort was anemic, and 27.3% demonstrated iron-store depletion. Paired analysis showed an average reduction of .83 g/dl in hemoglobin (p < .001), and of 9.8 mg/dl in ferritin (p < .001). sTfR increased from 1.9 to 2.1 mg/dl (p < .003) among recruits who became anemic. Half of the recruits experienced mild anemia after 6 months of training. Iron store depletion was observed among 24.5% of the cohort after training, as opposed to 15% at recruitment. Overall, these changes were not accompanied by a significant increase in sTfR, but among the subset of anemic subjects, there was a slight increase in index value.
In half of the cases, new-onset anemia was attributable to iron deficiency, and in the remainder, to hemodilution.
与年龄和性别匹配的平民相比,战斗士兵贫血的患病率更高。这可能是由运动员中常见的血液稀释或体内铁储备减少引起的。本研究的目的是调查以色列国防军新兵训练6个月后缺铁性贫血的发生率。
在训练前采集新兵的血液。经过6个月的随访,从最初的队列中采集了153对配对血液样本。在两个时间点均测量全血细胞计数以及血清铁、转铁蛋白和铁蛋白。在119对配对样本中测量可溶性转铁蛋白受体(sTfR),并计算sTfR/对数铁蛋白比值。
入伍时,平均血红蛋白浓度为14.7±0.9 g/dl。铁-转铁蛋白饱和度为34.1%±13.6%,平均铁蛋白浓度为53.6±33.2 ng/ml。贫血患病率(Hb<14 g/dl)为17.6%,14.9%的参与者缺铁(铁蛋白<22 mg/dl)。6个月时,该队列中有50.3%贫血,27.3%显示铁储备耗竭。配对分析显示血红蛋白平均降低0.83 g/dl(p<0.001),铁蛋白平均降低9.8 mg/dl(p<0.001)。在贫血的新兵中,sTfR从1.9增加到2.1 mg/dl(p<0.003)。一半的新兵在训练6个月后出现轻度贫血。训练后在24.5%的队列中观察到铁储备耗竭,而入伍时为15%。总体而言,这些变化并未伴随着sTfR的显著增加,但在贫血受试者亚组中,指数值略有增加。
在一半的病例中,新发贫血归因于缺铁,其余归因于血液稀释。