Elevated serum iron concentration in adolescent alcohol users
I. M. Friedman, H. C. Kraemer, F. S. Mendoza and L. D. Hammer
Department of Pediatrics, Stanford (Calif) University School of Medicine.
Alcohol is a frequently abused drug among adolescents. In adults, alcohol
alters iron metabolism, predisposing to excess hepatic iron storage and,
possibly, liver damage. The purpose of this study was to determine whether
alcohol is associated with an elevated serum iron concentration and
transferrin saturation in adolescents, and to determine the contribution of
oral contraceptive use to these abnormalities. Adolescents (591 male and
614 female) aged 16 to 19 years, who participated in the first National
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1971 to 1973, were grouped
according to their reported frequency of alcohol intake. Drinking frequency
was associated with serum iron concentrations in boys and girls, and with
total iron-binding capacity, transferrin saturation, and hemoglobin
concentration in boys. Alcohol use was associated with an elevated serum
iron concentration only in oral contraceptive nonusers. Adolescents who use
alcohol have an elevated serum iron concentration, and male alcohol users
have an increased transferrin saturation as well. These abnormalities may
be precursors of hepatic iron overload and chronic liver damage.