Drugs and the hematologic system
The hematologic system includes plasma (the liquid component of  blood) and blood cells, such as red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells, and  platelets. Types of drugs used to treat disorders of the hematologic system  include:
-  hematinic
-  anticoagulant
-  thrombolytic.
Hematinic drugs
Hematinic drugs provide essential  building blocks for RBC production. They do so by increasing hemoglobin, the  necessary element for oxygen transportation.
Iron, vitamin B12, folic acid
This section discusses hematinic drugs used to treat microcytic and  macrocytic anemia’iron, vitamin B12, and folic acid.
It also describes the use of erythropoietin agents to treat  normocytic anemia.
 Iron
Iron preparations are used to treat the  most common form of anemia’iron deficiency anemia. Iron preparations discussed  in this section include ferrous fumarate, ferrous gluconate, ferrous sulfate,  iron dextran, and sodium ferric gluconate complex.
Pharmacokinetics (how drugs circulate)
Iron is absorbed primarily from the duodenum and upper jejunum of  the intestine. Different iron formulations don’t vary in absorption, but they do  vary in the amount of elemental iron supplied.
Low iron increases absorption
The amount of iron absorbed depends partially on the body’s stores  of iron. When body stores are low or RBC production is accelerated, iron  absorption may increase by 20% to 30%. On the other hand, when total iron stores  are large, the body absorbs only about 5% to 10% of the iron available.
Enteric-coated preparations decrease iron absorption because, in  that form, iron isn’t released until after it leaves the duodenum. The lymphatic  system absorbs the parenteral form after I.M. injections.
Hemoglobin has it
Iron is transported by the blood and bound to transferrin, its  carrier plasma protein. About 30% of the iron is stored primarily as hemosiderin  or ferritin in the reticuloendothelial cells of the liver, spleen, and bone  marrow. About 66% of the total body iron is contained in hemoglobin. Excess iron  is excreted in urine, stool, sweat, and through intestinal cell-sloughing. It  appears in breast milk and crosses the placenta.
Pharmacodynamics (how drugs act)
Although iron has other roles, its most important role is the  production of hemoglobin. About 80% of iron in the plasma goes to the bone  marrow, where it’s used for erythropoiesis (production of RBCs).
Pharmacotherapeutics (how drugs are used)
Oral iron therapy is the preferred route for preventing or treating  iron deficiency anemia. It’s used to prevent anemias in children ages 6 months  to 2 years because this is a period of rapid growth and development. Pregnant  women may need iron supplements to replace the iron used by the developing  fetus.
 Warning!
Adverse  reactions to iron therapy
The most common adverse reactions to iron therapy are gastric  irritation and constipation. Iron preparations also darken stool, and liquid  preparations can stain the teeth.
The most serious reaction is anaphylaxis, which may occur after  administration of parenteral iron. To guard against such a reaction, administer  an initial test dose before giving a full-dose  infusion.
Ironclad options
Parenteral iron therapy is used for patients who can’t absorb oral  preparations, aren’t compliant with oral therapy, or have bowel disorders (such  as ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease). Patients with end-stage renal disease  who are receiving hemodialysis may also receive parenteral iron therapy at the  end of their dialysis session. While parenteral iron therapy corrects the iron  store deficiency quickly, it doesn’t correct the anemia any faster than oral  preparations would.
Iron preparations available for parenteral administration are iron  dextran (given by I.M. injection or slow, continuous I.V. infusion) and iron  sucrose. Iron sucrose is used for patients on hemodialysis. 
Drug interactions
Iron absorption is reduced by antacids as well as by such foods as  coffee, tea, eggs, and milk. Other drug interactions involving iron  include:
-  Absorption of tetracyclines (demeclocycline, doxycycline, minocycline, oxytetracycline, and tetracycline), methyldopa, quinolones (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, lomefloxacin, moxifloxacin, norfloxacin, ofloxacin, and sparfloxacin), levothyroxine, and penicillamine may be reduced when taken with oral iron preparations.
-  Cholestyramine, cimetidine, proton-pump inhibitors, and colestipol may reduce iron absorption in the GI tract
Safe and sound
Testing  for parenteral iron sensitivity
Parenteral iron can cause acute hypersensitivity reactions,  including anaphylaxis, dyspnea, urticaria, other rashes, pruritus, arthralgia,  myalgia, fever, sweating, and allergic purpura. To test for drug sensitivity and  prevent serious reactions, always give a test dose of iron dextran before  beginning therapy.
Carefully assess the patient’s response to the test dose. If no  adverse reactions occur within 1 hour, give the total dose. If adverse reactions  occur, notify the prescriber immediately. To treat anaphylaxis, keep epinephrine  and standard emergency equipment readily available.
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