iron overload

NOUN
  1. pathology in which iron accumulates in the tissues; characterized by bronzed skin and enlarged liver and diabetes mellitus and abnormalities of the pancreas and the joints
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use iron overload In A Sentence

  • The biopsy may determine the severity of the disease and rule out other possible causes of liver disease such as alcoholic or drug-induced hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis or iron overload in the liver (hereditary haemochromatosis). Vanguard News
  • The Nightingale School pupil has to wear a bumbag containing a special drug which is fed into her system everyday to prevent her having an iron overload in her blood.
  • If left untreated, however, hereditary hemochromatosis can lead to damaging or even fatal iron overload.
  • This review summarized the morbidity, mortality, and clinical features of iron overload, and introduced the advantages of the new chelator deferasirox over traditional agents.
  • If left untreated, however, hereditary hemochromatosis can lead to damaging or even fatal iron overload.
  • In a 2009 study involving beta thalassemic mice at Einstein, Dr. Fabry and her colleagues made a paradoxical observation: Despite the rodents 'anemia and iron overload, injecting them with more iron improved their anemia by increasing both hemoglobin and the number of red cells. Medlogs - Recent stories
  • However, severe iron overload from hereditary hemochromatosis or secondary causes may be indistinguishable.
  • Some special cases, I admit, might include tests for the actionable genetic variants that dispose a person to hemochromatosis, a condition characterized by iron overload in organs including the liver and endocrine glands -- and which is included in most of the commercial panels; or to blood clots, which are not usually included in direct-to-consumer kits. Dr. Elaine Schattner: An Educated Medical Consumer: On Personal DNA Testing
  • A randomized, multicenter, phase II study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of oral ICL670 (deferasirox) 20 mg/kg/day relative to subcutaneous deferoxamine in sickle cell disease patients with iron overload from repeated blood transfusions Sickle cell disease research at The Children's Hospital
  • However, severe iron overload from hereditary hemochromatosis or secondary causes may be indistinguishable.
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy