Ravn
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Based on the reference list citing their own work, up until now the authors seem to have largely focused on high ferritin in acute inflammatory conditions. I'm in skimming-only mode so I can't follow how they get from ferritin in acute to ferritin in chronic illness.
Further based on the reference list they also seem to have missed a couple of ME studies which found hints of suggestions of iron involvement in ME (Lipkins & Birch ring a bell?). I can't remember clearly now but I think it was about possible issues with getting iron into the cell and/or utilising it inside the cell. There doesn't appear to have been any follow up. Typical
As someone with an oddball form of haemochromatosis I've always wondered about the possibility of a link between iron and ME so will be looking out for the currently in-press ref #8 paper "Utility of serum ferritin for predicting myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome in patients with long COVID"
Having said that, I'd be surprised if simple ferritin levels are in any way useful. PwME report anything from deficiency to very high levels. And in my own experience with high, normal and borderline deficient ferritin levels I've never noticed any correlation with my ME symptoms whatsoever.
@Wonko, are you being followed up? As @Arnie Pye said, clinical guidelines are changing all the time but where I live a ferritin reading of >1000 would still raise a big red flag and at the very least prompt a repeat test to see if it's a one-off or something more chronic in which case the doctor would be expected to investigate further.
Further based on the reference list they also seem to have missed a couple of ME studies which found hints of suggestions of iron involvement in ME (Lipkins & Birch ring a bell?). I can't remember clearly now but I think it was about possible issues with getting iron into the cell and/or utilising it inside the cell. There doesn't appear to have been any follow up. Typical
As someone with an oddball form of haemochromatosis I've always wondered about the possibility of a link between iron and ME so will be looking out for the currently in-press ref #8 paper "Utility of serum ferritin for predicting myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome in patients with long COVID"
Having said that, I'd be surprised if simple ferritin levels are in any way useful. PwME report anything from deficiency to very high levels. And in my own experience with high, normal and borderline deficient ferritin levels I've never noticed any correlation with my ME symptoms whatsoever.
@Wonko, are you being followed up? As @Arnie Pye said, clinical guidelines are changing all the time but where I live a ferritin reading of >1000 would still raise a big red flag and at the very least prompt a repeat test to see if it's a one-off or something more chronic in which case the doctor would be expected to investigate further.