"Steve Waco" <St...@spokanediscount.com> wrote in message
news:ly_B8.319$Ph6....@news.uswest.net...
BTW, stools aren't cultured for blood. Occult blood testing is done on
special cards with impregnated paper inside. A small bit of feces is
smeared on the paper. Then a reagent is added and blue color changed
looked for. If blue is seen, the occult blood is called positive.
Judy Dilworth, M.T. (ASCP)
Microbiology
That dude has a continuing problem because as fast as he is replenishing his
iron stores, he is continuing to lose iron. The reason why is up to his
doctor to figure out. But, to me his running 7 miles a day is probably a
big part of his problem.
"JEDilworth" <bact...@nospamhortonsbay.com> wrote in message
news:3CD9348D...@nospamhortonsbay.com...
I'm afraid this isn't true. Body iron deficits for the anemic are a gram or
two, and it's very hard to absorb more than about 30 mg/day from pills (the
required 150 mg elemental iron a day will surely give you GI problems, at
least at first). Divide the first number by the second and you find that
typical oral iron repletion time, working as hard as you can, is around 1 or
2 MONTHS, not weeks. For most people, trying to do it with minimal GI
problems, it's considerably longer than that.
SBH
--
I welcome Email from strangers with the minimal cleverness to fix my address
(it's an open-book test). I strongly recommend recipients of unsolicited
bulk Email ad spam use "http://combat.uxn.com" to get the true corporate
name of the last ISP address on the viewsource header, then forward message
& headers to "abuse@[offendingISP]."
> "Sir John" <Sir Jo...@GetStev.com> wrote in message
> > In regards to Runner's Anemia, anyone one can restore their iron levels
> > by popping pills in about one week or less.
> I'm afraid this isn't true. Body iron deficits for the anemic are a gram
or
> two, and it's very hard to absorb more than about 30 mg/day from pills
(the
> required 150 mg elemental iron a day will surely give you GI problems, at
> least at first). Divide the first number by the second and you find that
> typical oral iron repletion time, working as hard as you can, is around 1
or
> 2 MONTHS, not weeks. For most people, trying to do it with minimal GI
> problems, it's considerably longer than that.
So, MD's don't know everything?
Okay, 10 days ... NOT one week.
Beyond me personally doing it in 4 days, it obviously depends on how much of
a iron deficit a person has. But of course, one does presume that a human
being is capable of thinking for themselves.
Hernandez Lamas MC, Lopez Perez-Lanzac JC, Prat Arrojo I.
[Determination of serum ferritin: ideas for avoiding induced
ferropenia in blood donors]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_ui
ds=8197526&dopt=Abstract
Sangre (Barc). 1994 Feb;39(1):9-14. Spanish.
PMID: 8197526
Ferropenia is spanish for iron deficiency.
ABSTRACT: "Iron supplement is advisable during the 4 first donations
in regular blood donors and in those with iron deficiency, with
ferrous sulphate at a dose of 100 mg/day for 10 days."
One would think that a human would not normally cause their own anemia, too.
Care to tell the nice people how you became anemic?
>I have no wish to be known as a medical authority, or to handhold patients
through their own medical problems
Isn't this a bit inconsistent with the advice you have recently offered
regarding iron dosages and vitamin C supplementation? Read what you've
posted before you hang yourself out further.
And about those two degrees you claim to hold; in what and from what
institution?
--
Stev
Still dancing in the Phil Zone & scattering Garcia ashes
Stev Lenon MT(ASCP) - In healthcare the ultimate bottom line is patients not
profit
Save a cow, eat a PETA member
sle...@tampabay.rr.com
http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/index.html/slhomepage92kword.htm
That is because I am a recognized authority on smn. :-)
"slenon" <sle...@tampabay.rr.com> wrote in message
news:drgC8.232750$nc.34...@typhoon.tampabay.rr.com...
You might be a recognized example of how to become anemic. But as for as
being an authority, the only recognition I see voiced is that which comes
from your own keyboard. What degrees? What institutions?
ada
i dont think im that
i had stool test=negative..
ada <ben...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:37621b2e.02050...@posting.google.com...
Just when I'd killfiled every deMan, now it's Sir John. For the sake of
people who are still suffering you, there's quite a difference between how
much iron you lose in a donation of blood (250 mg or so, for which you need
to take 1000 mg over 10 days to replace) and how much you iron need to lose
to become anemic from iron deficiency, which is what we were discussing
(runner's anemia, hey). Multiply by 4 to 6, and you get what I said. One or
two months.
And BTW, PLONK.
SBH
>
> Hernandez Lamas MC, Lopez Perez-Lanzac JC, Prat Arrojo I.
> [Determination of serum ferritin: ideas for avoiding induced
> ferropenia in blood donors]
>
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_ui
> ds=8197526&dopt=Abstract
> Sangre (Barc). 1994 Feb;39(1):9-14. Spanish.
> PMID: 8197526
>
> Ferropenia is spanish for iron deficiency.
>
> ABSTRACT: "Iron supplement is advisable during the 4 first donations
> in regular blood donors and in those with iron deficiency, with
> ferrous sulphate at a dose of 100 mg/day for 10 days."
>
>
>
>
--
> people who are still suffering you, there's quite a difference between how
> much iron you lose in a donation of blood (250 mg or so, for which you
need
> to take 1000 mg over 10 days to replace) and how much you iron need to
lose
> to become anemic from iron deficiency, which is what we were discussing
> (runner's anemia, hey).
Boy are you dumber than dumb!
I posted a whole series of citations on how blood donors can become anemic
from donating blood.
A blood test showed that I was anemic. Another test, four days later showed
that I was no longer anemic.
On top of that, the Twit Stev has been advertising the fact that I was
anemic for weeks now.
But no! The good doctor thinks that he is smarter than everybody else.
Steve go back into the hole where you crawled out of!
See Stev, ... Steve Harris, MD says that I was NEVER anemic! In academia,
MDs are NEVER wrong!!!
Ha, ... Hah, Ha! Steve obviously plunked you a long time ago.
So, if you aren't anemic why take iron?
ada
No, he said that there is a distinct difference in the amount of iron loss
via voluntary blood donation and that of a chronic anemia. There is also a
distinction in the amount of time required for supplemental iron therapy to
correct the iron deficit in an otherwise normal blood donor and in a person
with a chronic iron deficiency.
You should read for comprehension, not self actualization.
>I posted a whole series of citations on how blood donors can become anemic
from donating blood
You also posted a tale indicating how you lied to blood donation centers
regarding the frequency of your donations in pursuit of some twisted desire
to decrease your iron stores.
You don't need to donate blood to decrease your iron stores. You bleed
everytime you try to compete with medical professionals on these usegroups.
Is it truly rewarding writing under other screen names in support of
yourself? Do you really think it fools anyone? And if you can't post your
degrees and which insitution granted them, ask one of your other screen
names to do so. Surely, one of them must remember.
"slenon" <sle...@tampabay.rr.com> wrote in message
news:nMvC8.437034$K52.73...@typhoon.tampabay.rr.com...
"Sir John" <Sir Jo...@GetStev.com> wrote in message
news:JEqC8.13298$6T5.1...@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
Sigh. Not true, either, since you can mobilize them fast. You can raise Hb
levels as much as half a g/dL a day, ie from 11 to 11.5. This is about 1.5
points of hematocrit a day, or nearly 200 mL/day, which would require
absorbing 100 mg of iron a day (max is about 30, for which you need to take
150).
Take home message is that you can't really absorb iron from pills to make
blood as fast as the maximal rate that you can do it from your own stores.
I'm merely commenting that you can't do is replete the STORES at this rate,
which means also you can't replace lost blood this fast if you don't have
the stores, and are relying on pills.
"Steve Harris" <SBHar...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:abg4ik$h1d$1...@slb5.atl.mindspring.net...
There are two main forms of iron in the plasma (outside the red cells, in
which the iron is in in a third form--hemoglobin). One of the plasma iron
compounds is ferritin. The other is iron bound to transferrin. Tranferrin is
most of the "total iron-binding protein" (TIBC) content of your plasma. The
iron bound to transferrin (which helps make your plasma yellow) goes up
immediately if you take an iron pill-- half life is about 6 hours. It's what
is measured in Fe/TIBC on a lab test. It's why you should not take your iron
pill the day before you have this measured.
The other major measurement (ferritin) is an index of body stores of iron,
so long as you don't have an infection or some other inflammatory process
going on. It's not affected by single doses of iron at all.
We can't talk about iron unless we know which of these three kinds of blood
iron is being looked at.
SBH
"Steve Harris" <sbha...@ix.RETICULATEDOBJECTcom.com> wrote in message
news:abhu83$t03$1...@slb7.atl.mindspring.net...