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Iron Deficiency Without Anemia
Hemoglobin is the last iron-dependent number in your body to fall, which means a routine blood test can read "normal" while your iron stores have been empty for months. That gap — iron deficiency without anemia — is one of the most under-diagnosed reversible causes of unexplained fatigue, restless legs at night, exercise that suddenly feels harder, and chronic hair shedding in menstruating adults. A ferritin test catches it; a cheap supplement on a 12-week course usually fixes it.
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For the menstruating reader whose afternoons start sliding around 2 pm despite eight hours in bed, this is one of the largest reversible fixes available — roughly half of women with confirmed empty iron stores cut their fatigue in half within twelve weeks of starting iron. The sleep benefit runs through restless legs, which iron treats at the root. Cost is about fifteen dollars total; the only real friction is the stomach, and taking iron every other day largely solves that.

Iron in the body lives in three pools, drawn down in order. The first to empty is storage iron — held in a protein called ferritin, parked mostly in your liver, spleen, and bone marrow. The second is the iron in transit through your bloodstream, ferried by a carrier called transferrin. The third — the one a standard blood count actually measures — is the iron locked into hemoglobin inside your red blood cells. Long before that last pool drops, ferritin is on the floor, the carriers are running half-empty, and the bits of your body that need iron for jobs other than making blood are quietly downshifting Camaschella 2015.

What happens when you fix it

Three randomised trials anchor the case that fixing iron deficiency in people whose blood count looks fine actually fixes how they feel.

The other knock-on effects of iron repletion have their own evidence. Submaximal exercise capacity — the kind that matters for a hike, a long run, or just climbing stairs without losing your breath — improves over a few weeks of iron in non-anemic deficient women, because the mitochondria in your muscles run on iron-dependent enzymes that have been operating on a tightened supply Pasricha et al. 2014. Restless legs syndrome responds particularly well: the international restless legs body treats iron as a first-line lever at a higher ferritin threshold than the rest of medicine uses, because the brain runs through iron faster than the body does Allen et al. 2018. The cognitive lift — attention, memory, learning task accuracy — tracks ferritin recovery in young women repleted with iron, though the effect here is real-but-modest rather than transformative Murray-Kolb & Beard 2007. And the mood signal is the softest of the bunch but worth naming: women with empty iron stores show measurably higher rates of depressive symptoms in US population data, and the iron-dependent enzymes that make dopamine and serotonin give the link a plausible mechanism — though randomised mood-outcome trials in this specific population are still thin.

Who actually has this

Iron deficiency without anemia is overwhelmingly a problem of menstruating people. The largest US dataset analysed to date, drawing on twenty years of national health surveys, found that nearly 4 in 10 US females aged 12 to 21 had empty iron stores while only about 1 in 16 met criteria for outright anemia — roughly six times as many women had the silent version as had the version a doctor was probably looking for Weyand et al. 2023. Prevalence runs higher again in Black and Hispanic adolescents, in anyone with heavy periods (uterine fibroids and adenomyosis are the usual hidden drivers), in the year after a pregnancy, in plant-based eaters who don't pair iron-rich foods with vitamin C, in endurance athletes (the combination of foot-strike damage to red cells, sweat losses, and inflammation-spike hormone signals is brutal on iron status), in people on long-term acid-blocking drugs that quietly cut how much iron the gut absorbs, and in frequent blood donors — each whole-blood donation pulls roughly two months of dietary iron back out, and the body usually takes six months to replace it.

The opposite end of the spectrum is also worth naming. In men under 50 and in post-menopausal women, iron deficiency without an obvious cause is unusual enough that the question stops being "should I supplement" and starts being "where is the bleeding coming from" — see the contraindications and out-of-scope sections below.

What happens if you keep ignoring it

Empty iron stores don't refill themselves on a normal diet — not while you're still bleeding once a month, and not on a diet that supplies less iron than you lose. The 2 pm wall keeps showing up. The hair you find in the shower drain keeps coming out in the same volume. The runs you used to look forward to start feeling like work at the same pace. The restless feeling that makes you kick the sheets off and shift positions at midnight keeps fragmenting your nights. Your partner stops asking if you're coming on the morning walk. People at work start saying things like "you look tired" — not as a question, as an observation.

None of it is dramatic. None of it is the kind of thing you'd take to a doctor on its own. But over the months and years that empty ferritin sits there, the "this is just my baseline" story hardens — until it isn't really your baseline, it's the deficit, and the person who could have given you the afternoons back was a primary-care clinician who would have ordered one extra blood test.

How to test, and how to fix it

Ask for serum ferritin and transferrin saturation — not just a complete blood count. A normal hemoglobin doesn't rule iron deficiency out; it just rules out the late-stage version. Current haematology guidance treats ferritin at or below 30 ng/mL as the diagnostic line in non-pregnant adults without active inflammation, with the caveat that many lab reference ranges still flag the floor at 15 — a threshold derived from population averages that already include large fractions of iron-deficient women, and that misses most actual cases Iolascon et al. 2024 Weyand et al. 2023. For restless legs specifically, treatment kicks in at the higher threshold of 75 ng/mL because the brain needs more iron headroom than the body does Allen et al. 2018.

When not to supplement

The one absolute reason not to start iron without testing first is hereditary hemochromatosis — a relatively common genetic condition (about 1 in 200 people of Northern European ancestry are at risk) that loads iron into the liver, pancreas, heart, and joints, and that accelerates dramatically when extra iron arrives. The same blood test that diagnoses iron deficiency also catches the early pattern of iron overload: a transferrin saturation above about 45% paired with a high ferritin, especially in a man over 40 or a post-menopausal woman, is hemochromatosis territory and warrants genetic testing rather than empirical iron.

Three things to unlearn

First, that a "normal" blood count means iron is fine. Hemoglobin is the last domino, not the early warning Camaschella 2015. A complete blood count alone misses the silent version entirely; the right test is ferritin.

Second, that ferritin's lab reference range starts where iron deficiency starts. Many labs still flag the floor at 15 ng/mL, a number derived from population averages that already include large fractions of iron-deficient menstruating women — so the "reference range" defines normal partly by the prevalence of the disease. Recent guidelines have moved the diagnostic cutoff to 30 Iolascon et al. 2024.

Third, that low iron in men or post-menopausal women is the same problem as low iron in someone who menstruates. It isn't. Without monthly blood loss, iron deficiency in adults is unusual enough that the working diagnosis becomes occult bleeding — most often somewhere in the gut — until proven otherwise. Reaching for an iron supplement without that workup can paper over a colorectal cancer for a year.

Where this goes wrong in practice

Three places this falls apart. The first is the lab order itself: "check my iron" often becomes a complete blood count, which measures hemoglobin and misses ferritin entirely. Spell out ferritin and transferrin saturation on the form, in those words.

The second is the course length. A six-week run of iron may pull a borderline hemoglobin back up, but rarely refills the storage pool, and the symptoms come back within a quarter. Three months is the minimum; many people need longer, and the only way to tell is to re-test ferritin.

The third is the stomach. Nausea, constipation, dark stools, and a metallic taste drive somewhere between a third and a half of patients off daily iron in the first weeks Stoffel et al. 2017. The fix is mostly in the dosing schedule: every-other-day single morning doses cut the gut effects roughly in half while raising absorption — see the protocol section above.

What changes when you fix it

The fatigue lift is the headline. Around half of menstruating women with confirmed empty iron stores cut their fatigue by half within six to twelve weeks of starting iron Vaucher et al. 2012 Krayenbuehl et al. 2011. The first sign people report isn't a stimulant high — it's the afternoon not collapsing the way it used to. The 3 pm crash softens. The walk home from work stops feeling like a chore. The exercise sessions stop feeling harder at the same heart rate.

Restless legs subside over a couple of months once brain iron rises Trenkwalder et al. 2017 Allen et al. 2018. Sleep gets less broken; partners stop being woken by the shifting and kicking. Hair shedding settles back toward normal over three to six months — the hair cycle itself is slow, so what you'll see first is fewer hairs in the drain rather than dramatic new growth. Attention and short-term memory tighten up modestly Murray-Kolb & Beard 2007. None of it is overnight. Most of it is in place by month three.

Adjacent threads worth pulling on: heavy menstrual bleeding (the upstream cause for most premenopausal cases — if you're refilling iron with a supplement and emptying it again every cycle, the loop never closes), iron requirements in pregnancy (different thresholds, different stakes, treated separately), and hereditary hemochromatosis (the inverse problem — too much iron, not too little, and the same blood tests detect it). And if your iron drops faster than supplements can keep up with, or you're male or post-menopausal with an unexplained drop, the question stops being supplement-related and becomes a gastroenterology referral.

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