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Biomarkers

Ferritin

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Ferritin is a ubiquitous intracellular iron-storage protein that releases a small fraction into circulation; serum ferritin is therefore the most widely used biomarker for assessing total body iron stores. Low ferritin (typically <30 µg/L, or <15 µg/L in some guidelines) indicates depleted iron stores preceding overt iron-deficiency anemia and is associated with fatigue, reduced exercise capacity, impaired cognitive function, and hair loss even before hemoglobin falls. Conversely, elevated ferritin is a potent positive acute-phase reactant that rises substantially with inflammation, infection, liver disease, obesity, and metabolic syndrome, complicating interpretation; persistently elevated values without these confounders may reflect hereditary hemochromatosis or secondary iron overload, which accelerates oxidative stress, hepatic fibrosis, and cardiomyopathy. Optimal ferritin for health is debated; many longevity-oriented practitioners target approximately 70–120 µg/L, with caution warranted at both extremes.

Sources

  1. Wang W, Knovich MA, Coffman LG, Torti FM, Torti SV. (2010). Serum ferritin: Past, present and future. *Biochimica et Biophysica Acta*doi:10.1016/j.bbagen.2010.03.011
  2. Kim CH, Kim HK, Bae SJ, Park JY, Lee KU. (2011). Association of elevated serum ferritin concentration with insulin resistance and impaired glucose metabolism in Korean men and women. *Metabolism*doi:10.1016/j.metabol.2010.03.007
  3. Ferrucci L, Corsi A, Lauretani F, Bandinelli S, Bartali B, Taub DD, Guralnik JM, Longo DL. (2005). The origins of age-related proinflammatory state. *Blood*doi:10.1182/blood-2004-07-2599