Iron status of elderly Americans

Abstract
Studies of iron nutriture in the elderly are limited and very few include observations on individuals over the age of 75. The two Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys carried out by the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare demonstrate that the mean iron intake of Americans is adequate until the age of 75. However, with changes in the major food sources there is a decrease in iron derived from meat and a concomitant rise in the proportion supplied by breakfast cereals. Alterations in dietary iron bioavailability that may result from this have not been studied. Physiological data suggest that the elderly do not represent a target population for iron deficiency since iron requirements are no greater than those of adult men and lower than those of children and menstruating women. Furthermore, there is little direct evidence of a high prevalence of iron deficiency in the elderly, but the laboratory measurements that have proved useful in defining iron status in younger people have not been standardized for or extensively used in older people. Anemia is still the most important known consequence of significant iron deficiency. However, the application of Hb or hematocrit standards used in younger people to the elderly as well as the assumption that anemia can be equated with iron deficiency invalidates the conclusions of many surveys. Hb and hematocrit measurements are not suitable screening tests for iron deficiency in the elderly and there is an urgent need for a clearer understanding of the physiological and nutritional factors responsible for lower Hb values in older people, particularly older Blacks.