IDA: Basics & Etiology - Running on Empty
- Physiological Stores Depletion:
- Term infants: by 4-6 months
- Preterm/SGA infants: by 2-3 months
- Nutritional Deficiency (Most Common):
- Exclusive breastfeeding beyond 6 months without iron supplementation.
- Cow’s/goat's milk dominance before age 1 (low bioavailability, occult GI bleed).
- Delayed introduction of iron-rich complementary foods.
- Pathological Causes:
- Increased Demand: Growth spurts (infancy, adolescence).
- Blood Loss: Hookworm (Ancylostoma duodenale), Meckel’s diverticulum.
- Malabsorption: Celiac disease, chronic diarrhea.

⭐ The primary cause of IDA in Indian children (6 mo - 2 yr) is faulty feeding, notably excessive cow's milk intake, which is poor in iron and can cause colitis.
Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Pale, Pica, Probed
- General Symptoms: Pallor (best seen in palms & conjunctiva), lethargy, irritability, poor feeding, and breath-holding spells.
- Epithelial Changes (Classic Signs):
- Koilonychia: Spoon-shaped nails.
- Pica: Craving for non-nutritive substances (pagophagia: ice; geophagia: mud).
- Glossitis: Smooth, sore tongue (atrophic glossitis).
- Angular Cheilitis: Fissures at mouth corners.
- Diagnosis - Lab Investigations:
- Complete Blood Count (CBC):
- Microcytic hypochromic anemia (↓ MCV, ↓ MCH, ↓ MCHC).
- ↓ Hemoglobin (< 11 g/dL).
- Iron Profile:
- ↓ Serum Ferritin (< 15 ng/mL) is the most specific marker.
- ↓ Serum Iron, ↑ TIBC, ↓ Transferrin saturation (< 16%).
- Complete Blood Count (CBC):
⭐ Increased RDW (Red Cell Distribution Width) is the earliest hematological indicator of iron deficiency.
Management & Prevention - Fixing the Ferrous Funk
-
Oral Iron Therapy (First-Line):
- Dose: 3-6 mg/kg/day of elemental iron, given in 2-3 divided doses.
- Administer with Vitamin C (e.g., orange juice) between meals for optimal absorption.
- Continue for 2-3 months after hemoglobin normalizes to replenish iron stores (ferritin).
- ⚠️ Side effects: GI upset, black stools. Can be given with food to minimize, but this reduces absorption.
-
Parenteral Iron (IV):
- Reserved for severe anemia (Hb < 4-5 g/dL), malabsorption, non-compliance, or significant intolerance to oral therapy.
-
Prevention & Dietary Counseling:
- Promote iron-rich foods (green leafy vegetables, lentils, jaggery, meat).
- Start iron-fortified cereals at 6 months.
- Prophylactic iron for high-risk infants (preterm, LBW): 2 mg/kg/day from 2 weeks to 1 year.
- Limit cow's milk to < 500 mL/day in toddlers.
⭐ Monitoring Response: The earliest indicator of response to therapy is an increase in reticulocyte count, which peaks around 7-10 days. Hemoglobin should rise by at least 1 g/dL after 4 weeks.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Iron Deficiency Anemia is the most common nutritional deficiency in children.
- Exclusive breastfeeding beyond 6 months without iron supplementation is a key risk factor.
- Look for pallor, koilonychia (spoon nails), and pica.
- Labs show microcytic hypochromic cells, ↓ serum ferritin (most specific marker), and ↑ TIBC.
- Mentzer Index (MCV/RBC count) > 13 helps differentiate it from β-thalassemia trait.
- A therapeutic trial of iron leads to reticulocytosis within 5-10 days.
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