Eisenmangel ist der weltweit häufigste Mikronährstoffmangel. In Deutschland sind vor allem Frauen im gebärfähigen Alter, Schwangere und ältere Menschen betroffen. Die orale Eisensubstitution ist die Standardtherapie – aber auch eine der am häufigsten falsch eingenommenen.
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Iron deficiency should always be investigated by a doctor — especially in men and post-menopausal women. Dosage should be agreed with your doctor. This article does not replace medical advice.
Iron is the trace element whose deficiency most commonly leads to a doctor's visit worldwide. An estimated 8% of women of childbearing age suffer from iron deficiency anaemia — and even more have latent iron deficiency without anaemia. Correct supplementation is straightforward in principle, but common errors in how it is taken frequently render it ineffective in practice.
| Property | Details |
|---|---|
| Active substances | Ferrous sulfate, ferrous gluconate, ferrous fumarate, ferric maltol, ferric polymaltose |
| ATC code | B03AA (iron(II)), B03AB (iron(III)) |
| Drug class | Antanaemics / iron preparations |
| UK dietary reference value | 8.7 mg/day (men), 14.8 mg/day (women), 27 mg/day (pregnancy) |
| Therapeutic dose | 100–200 mg elemental iron/day (for deficiency) |
| Available forms | Tablets, capsules, syrup, drops, intravenous solution (i.v.) |
| Prescription status | No (oral as food supplement/OTC); iron i.v.: prescription only |
| Special feature | Fasting intake doubles absorption — but halves tolerability! |
Not every case of fatigue is iron deficiency — but iron deficiency is one of the most common causes of persistent exhaustion. The key is the pattern of laboratory results: ferritin reflects iron stores, haemoglobin reflects actual anaemia. A low ferritin with still-normal haemoglobin is called latent iron deficiency — and still causes symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, difficulty concentrating, and hair loss.
| Indication | Typical situation |
|---|---|
| Iron deficiency anaemia | Hb < 12 g/dL (women), < 13 g/dL (men) + ferritin < 15 µg/L |
| Latent iron deficiency | Ferritin < 30 µg/L (depleted stores), Hb still normal |
| Pregnancy | Increased requirement (27 mg/day). Monitor ferritin! |
| Heavy menstrual bleeding | Most common cause in women of childbearing age |
| Chronic conditions | Crohn's disease, coeliac disease, chronic bleeding, post-surgery |
| Restless legs syndrome | Ferritin < 75 µg/L — supplementation recommended |
Many iron products are available, and the differences are pharmacologically significant. The basic distinction: iron(II) (Fe²⁺) is the traditional, highly bioavailable form. Iron(III) (Fe³⁺) is better tolerated but less well absorbed. Which form is better depends on individual tolerability — and whether a proton pump inhibitor such as pantoprazole is being taken concurrently (more on this in chapter 6).
| Iron(II) (Fe²⁺) | Iron(III) (Fe³⁺) | |
|---|---|---|
| Compounds | Sulfate, gluconate, fumarate | Polymaltose, maltol |
| Bioavailability | Higher (10–15%) | Lower (3–5%) |
| Fasting intake | Recommended (doubles absorption) | Can be taken with food |
| GI side effects | Common (nausea, constipation, black stools) | Significantly fewer |
| Interactions | Many (chelation!) | Fewer |
| Cost | Low | Higher |
| Recommendation | Standard therapy when tolerated | When iron(II) is not tolerated |
The newer gold standard for intolerance is ferric maltol (Feraccru®). Studies show comparable efficacy with significantly fewer gastrointestinal complaints, and it can be taken with food. It is prescription-only and more expensive than ferrous sulfate — but often the better option for patients who cannot tolerate conventional iron supplements or who are on a PPI.
How iron is taken is the decisive chapter — not which product is chosen. Many patients take their iron daily but see barely any improvement in ferritin after months. The reason is almost always incorrect intake: at the wrong time, with the wrong drink, or too close to another medication. Iron forms insoluble complexes (chelates) with numerous substances, reducing absorption to nearly zero.
The most common practical problem: patients take levothyroxine and iron at the same time — and wonder why neither seems to work properly. Iron reduces the absorption of levothyroxine by up to 50%. The correct schedule:
Alternatively: take iron in the evening — at least 2 hours after the evening meal and well away from levothyroxine. For many patients this is the most practical solution. Record your intake schedule in your digital medication plan.
| Substance | Why? | Minimum gap |
|---|---|---|
| Levothyroxine | Chelation → up to 50% less thyroid hormone absorbed! | At least 2 hours (levothyroxine first!) |
| Magnesium / calcium | Mutual absorption inhibition | At least 2 hours |
| Tetracyclines / fluoroquinolones | Antibiotic rendered ineffective! | At least 2–4 hours |
| Pantoprazole / omeprazole | Stomach acid needed for Fe²⁺ absorption! | PPI inhibits iron uptake (see chapter 6) |
| Bisphosphonates (alendronate) | Mutual inhibition | At least 2 hours |
| Coffee / black tea | Tannins and polyphenols bind iron | 1–2 hours apart |
| Dairy products | Calcium inhibits iron absorption | Not at the same time |
| Wholegrain products | Phytic acid binds iron | Prefer to take iron on an empty stomach |
Gastrointestinal complaints are the most common reason for abandoning iron therapy. There are practical strategies that resolve the problem — without sacrificing efficacy.
Nausea: Taking iron with food reduces absorption by around 40% — but this is far better than stopping therapy completely. Anyone suffering significantly from nausea should start at a low dose and increase gradually, or switch directly to ferric maltol.
Constipation: Drink plenty of water, eat a high-fibre diet, and if necessary use a mild laxative such as lactulose. Switching to iron(III) can also significantly improve this.
Black stools: This is harmless and no cause for concern — it is a sign that the iron supplement is working. Important: black stools from iron differ from melaena (tarry stool from gastrointestinal bleeding, which is sticky, shiny, extremely foul-smelling, and tarry in consistency). If you are unsure whether it is iron-related or melaena, always see a doctor.
Metallic taste: Enteric-coated products or iron(III) compounds are much less likely to cause this problem.
A fascinating recent finding from iron research: newer studies show that taking iron every other day can improve absorption. The reason lies in the hormone hepcidin: after iron intake, hepcidin levels rise and inhibit further iron absorption. The following day, hepcidin is still elevated — so the second dose is less well absorbed. If a day is skipped, hepcidin falls again, and the next dose can be optimally absorbed. This schedule is not yet established in all guidelines, but is increasingly recommended by specialists. Anyone who tolerates daily iron poorly should discuss this with their doctor.
The combination of pantoprazole and iron tablets is one of the most common and least recognised causes of treatment-resistant iron deficiency. Many patients take iron tablets for weeks or months and barely see any improvement in their ferritin — without knowing that their stomach-protection medication is blocking absorption.
The mechanism is direct: iron(II) (Fe²⁺) requires an acidic environment in the stomach to dissolve and be absorbed. Pantoprazole and other proton pump inhibitors raise gastric pH from the normal 1–2 to 4–6. In this neutral environment, iron(II) remains poorly soluble — and cannot be absorbed.
In addition: pantoprazole lowers magnesium levels over time — which can indirectly prolong the QT interval (relevant for cardiac patients on citalopram or other QT-active medications). PPIs also increase the general risk of iron, vitamin B12, and magnesium deficiency.
Check all your combinations with the interaction check.
Iron has a broad interaction profile, arising primarily through chelation: iron binds chemically to other molecules and renders itself — or the other medication — ineffective. The insidious aspect: both substances are taken, but neither works properly. Check all combinations with the interaction check.
| Medication | Interaction | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Levothyroxine | Chelation → up to 50% less levothyroxine absorbed | 2h gap; levothyroxine always first! |
| Pantoprazole / PPI | Reduced Fe²⁺ absorption due to raised pH | Ferric maltol or take Fe²⁺ + vitamin C |
| Magnesium / calcium | Mutual absorption inhibition | At least 2 hours apart |
| Amoxicillin | Iron mildly inhibits antibiotic absorption | Gap recommended |
| Methyldopa / levodopa | Chelation, loss of effect | 2 hours apart |
| Methotrexate | Iron may increase methotrexate toxicity | Consult doctor |
| ACE inhibitors (ramipril) | Iron can be renally toxic with infusion | Caution with i.v. iron in combination! |
Anyone starting or monitoring iron therapy should be familiar with the relevant laboratory values. The most important misconception: many patients wait until their haemoglobin falls before taking iron. But haemoglobin is a late marker — the body mobilises all its iron stores before blood cell production is affected. Ferritin falls first, and even a low ferritin with still-normal haemoglobin causes noticeable symptoms.
| Parameter | Normal range | What it shows |
|---|---|---|
| Ferritin | 15–300 µg/L (men), 15–200 µg/L (women) | Iron stores — the first value to fall. Note: acute-phase protein; falsely elevated in inflammation! |
| Transferrin saturation | 16–45% | Iron transport in the blood — below 16% = iron deficiency |
| Haemoglobin (Hb) | 12–16 g/dL (women), 13–18 g/dL (men) | Only reduced when stores are empty (late sign!) |
| MCV | 80–100 fL | Below 80 fL (microcytic) = typical of iron deficiency |
| Reticulocytes | 0.5–2.5% | Rise after 5–10 days of therapy — best marker of treatment response! |
Ferritin is the storage protein for iron — and the first laboratory value to fall in iron deficiency. A ferritin below 30 µg/L means depleted stores, even if haemoglobin is still normal. For patients with fatigue, hair loss, or difficulty concentrating, a ferritin below 50 µg/L is increasingly considered a treatment threshold — not only below 15 µg/L.
The important caveat: ferritin is an acute-phase protein. In inflammation, infections, liver disease, or malignancy, ferritin rises independently of actual iron status. An elevated ferritin does not therefore rule out iron deficiency when concurrent inflammation is present. In such cases, transferrin saturation and soluble transferrin receptor must also be measured.
Treatment target: Ferritin above 50 µg/L, ideally 70–100 µg/L. After haemoglobin normalises, continue iron for at least 3 further months to replenish stores.
Reticulocytes as a response marker: Anyone who sees no rise in reticulocytes after 5–10 days of iron therapy should review their intake — spacing rules, vitamin C, PPI interaction? No rise despite correct intake may also indicate a malabsorption disorder.
The brite app shows a very clear pattern for iron supplements: the most common problems are incorrect timing and unknown interactions — particularly with levothyroxine and pantoprazole.
| Observation | Frequency | Typical comment |
|---|---|---|
| Iron + levothyroxine taken at the same time | Very common | "I was swallowing both together — the app warned me!" |
| Iron taken with coffee/breakfast | Very common | "Now I take iron 2 hours before coffee — my ferritin is finally rising." |
| Black stools causing panic | Common | "I thought I had an internal bleed!" |
| Stopping due to stomach problems | Common | "The iron tablets were so hard on my stomach that I gave up." |
| No vitamin C taken alongside | Common | "Since I've been drinking orange juice with it, I tolerate it much better." |
| PPI + iron interaction not recognised | Occasional | "My ferritin just wouldn't rise — until someone explained that pantoprazole blocks absorption." |
Particularly striking: black stools cause genuine panic in many patients — and lead to immediately stopping an otherwise effective therapy. This simple piece of information — that iron turns the stool black and that this is harmless — is missing from a prominent position on most package leaflets. Knowing the difference from true melaena (sticky, shiny, extremely foul-smelling, tarry in consistency) is important. When in doubt, always see a doctor.
How long should I take iron? As a rule, 3–6 months. This is longer than many patients expect. After haemoglobin normalises — which usually takes 4–8 weeks — therapy must continue for at least 3 further months to replenish ferritin stores. Anyone who stops too early may no longer have anaemia, but still has empty stores — and fatigue and difficulty concentrating persist. The treatment target is ferritin above 50 µg/L, ideally 70–100 µg/L.
Iron and levothyroxine gap — how much is enough? At least 2 hours. In practice, the evening schedule for iron works well: levothyroxine in the morning on an empty stomach, iron in the evening 2 hours after the evening meal. This avoids any overlap and removes the need to watch the clock in the morning. Alternatively: iron at midday, if the morning is forgotten anyway. The key point: the two products must never be taken together.
Ferritin too low — what to do? Ferritin below 30 µg/L means depleted stores and should always prompt investigation. The first step is always to find the cause: source of blood loss? Malabsorption? Poor diet? Only then does treatment begin. For ferritin below 15 µg/L with symptoms, a daily intake of 100–200 mg elemental iron is appropriate. The correct intake schedule is crucial.
Iron on an empty stomach or with food? On an empty stomach is better for absorption — but harder on the stomach. Fasting intake doubles iron absorption but can cause nausea and stomach pain. Anyone who tolerates fasting intake well: always take on an empty stomach, 30–60 minutes before breakfast with a glass of orange juice. Anyone who has problems: take with food — absorption falls by around 40%, but a consistently maintained therapy at 60% absorption is better than a discontinued therapy at 100% absorption for two weeks.
Iron and black stools — when to see a doctor? Black stools are a normal and harmless sign under iron therapy — iron(II) colours the gut contents black. No cause for concern. The important distinction: melaena from a gastrointestinal bleed is sticky, shiny, has a tarry consistency, and smells extremely unpleasant. If you are unsure whether it is iron-related or melaena: stop the iron briefly. If the stool returns to normal colour, it was the iron. If it stays black: see a doctor immediately.