Iron and Mental Health

Could low iron be making your mental health symptoms worse?

View  Transcript

As evidence of a link grows, people with depression, anxiety and more may want to get tested and eat iron-rich foods or take supplements.

Transcript

Host:

Welcome to Health Lab, your destination for news and stories about the future of healthcare.

Could low iron be making your mental health symptoms worse?

As evidence of a link grows, people with depression, anxiety and more may want to get tested and eat iron-rich foods or take supplements.

Most people these days understand that mental health issues have their roots in physical differences in our brains, genes and bodies, and differences in our life experiences.

But what you eat, and how your body uses the nutrients in your food, also matters to mental health.

A growing amount of research suggests that one key nutrient – iron – plays an important role, and that having too little of it can affect mental health symptoms.

Yet many people who have mental health conditions like depression or anxiety, and the providers who treat them, may not know about this link, says Stephanie Weinberg Levin, M.D., a psychiatrist at Michigan Medicine and the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.

She dove deep into the topic while doing a fellowship in integrative psychiatry. Recently, she and former psychiatry resident Theresa Gattari, M.D., summarized the current state of knowledge in a review article for their fellow psychiatrists.

The bottom line: eating iron-rich foods is important for everyone, and many people don’t get enough iron as it is. But people with mental health conditions may specifically want to ask their doctor or other health provider to order a blood test that measures their iron levels in a particular way.

If the result on that test – called a ferritin test – is low, it’s important to increase iron in the diet, and to take iron supplements if a health care provider recommends them.

“Iron is the most common nutrient deficiency and can have a big impact,” said Levin. “You can be iron-deficient without having anemia, but many mental health care providers aren’t aware that iron deficiency by itself has been linked to worse symptoms, or that supplementation has been linked to improved symptoms. But there is evidence there.”

Primary care providers may also not order tests of iron levels unless someone has symptoms of anemia, or a health condition or medical treatment that’s known to affect the body’s iron levels, she notes.

“We don’t always go looking for nutrient deficiencies, but they can really take a large toll on well-being,” said Levin, who also emphasizes that nutrients’ roles in mental health complement growing knowledge about the importance of stress, sleep habits and physical activity.

So, she encourages people who have a diagnosis of a mental health condition to talk with their health care team about getting tested and potentially taking supplements.

In addition to its well-known role in helping red blood cells perform the critical function of ferrying oxygen around the body, iron helps your body make the molecules that are needed to make key brain chemicals.

Specifically, iron plays an important role in how your body makes the neurotransmitters called serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine – all of them important in mental health.

Research suggests a connection between low iron levels and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia, Levin and Gattari write.

This includes surveys of large numbers of people that showed a higher percentage of people with depression also reported having a history of iron deficiency anemia, and a large study that showed higher rates of anxiety disorders, depression, sleep disorders, and psychotic disorders in patients with iron deficiency anemia. Smaller studies in people experiencing their first episode of psychosis also suggests a link between how severe their symptoms were and lower iron levels.

Low iron levels are also known to be associated with fatigue, which is one of the symptoms that can combine with others to qualify someone for a diagnosis of depression.

In addition to studies that have looked at the relationship between iron levels and symptoms, other studies have evaluated what happens when people with mental health conditions receive iron supplements.

A review of the evidence in 2013 showed iron supplementation was associated with improvement in mental health symptoms in three studies published before that year, and others showed improvements in thinking ability.

Multiple studies in people with and without mental health diagnoses have showed improvements in mood and fatigue after iron supplementation, even if they didn’t meet the criteria for iron-deficiency anemia. One study showed improvement in half of those whose ferritin was below   100 nanograms/milliliter, which is above the level of 30 nanograms/milliliter often used to define iron deficiency.

Ferritin levels are important to measure because they’re an indicator of the body’s overall iron stores – the ferritin molecule keeps iron stored within a coating of protein so it can be accessed when the body needs it. Blood tests for iron only measure iron levels in the blood, and blood tests for hemoglobin only measure the amount of iron-containing protein molecules in the blood which transport oxygen to the body.

Levin especially recommends ferritin testing for people who have both mental health conditions and another factor that makes them highly susceptible to low iron levels. That includes pregnant women, young children, women with heavy menstrual bleeding, frequent blood donors, patients with cancer, individuals who have had gastrointestinal surgeries or have digestive disorders, and those with heart failure.

For anyone with mental health symptoms whose ferritin levels have tested low, there isn’t yet a consensus on the optimum level to aim for through diet changes and supplementation, nor how often they should get tested after making changes. There also isn’t yet evidence about impacts of low iron or iron supplementation on people with other mental health diagnoses beyond the ones mentioned above.

In general, Levin says, it may be better to aim toward a ferritin level of 100 ng/ml and to get tests every 4 to 6 weeks.

It’s also important that your primary care provider is aware of any supplements you’re taking, even if it was recommended by a mental health provider or if you started taking it on your own.

There’s a risk of overdoing it on iron supplementation, Levin cautions, so it’s important to read the label on the supplement and to choose a brand that has been tested by an independent organization.

If there are toddlers or young children in the home or visiting, it’s also important to keep iron supplements out of reach, because they can cause serious and even fatal poisoning if taken by a very young child.

But in general, she said, “Iron supplements are inexpensive and can really make a significant impact on someone’s mental health if they’re deficient.”

For more on this story and others like it, michiganmedicine.org/health-lab. Health Lab is a part of the Michigan Medicine Podcast Network, and is produced by the Michigan Medicine Department of Communication. You can subscribe to Health Lab wherever you listen to podcasts.


More Articles About:

Mental Health anxiety Depression supplements Research Michigan Medicine podcast
Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells

Health Lab Podcast

Listen to more Health Lab podcasts - a part of the Michigan Medicine Podcast Network.

Related

foods
Health Lab

Could low iron make mental health symptoms worse?

Iron levels in the blood – and specifically, a type of iron storage called ferritin – have been linked to mental health symptom severity

Featured News & Stories

Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells
Health Lab Podcast

LGBTQ+ Aging in America

People over 50 are growing older in a very different environment for LGBTQ+ people than the one they grew up in. Now, a new University of Michigan poll looks at what that means for both people over 50 who are LGBTQ+, and those who are not.
Well-Being at Michigan Medicine with Dr. Elizabeth Harry
Well-Being at Michigan Medicine

The Power of Mattering

What does it take to create a culture where people can truly thrive? In this episode, Dr. Elizabeth Harry welcomes Dr. Robert Ernst, Chief Health Officer and Associate Vice President for Health and Wellness at the University of Michigan, about building well-being into systems, policies and everyday experiences. They explore purpose-driven leadership, belonging, mental health and why helping people feel they matter can strengthen entire communities.
person close up nails and shots going into face on comptuer screen gif moving
Health Lab

What is looksmaxxing?

A Q&A with Dr. Bravender discussing what looksmaxxing is. Along with the true dangers of it, what parents should know, and when to intervene.
Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells
Health Lab Podcast

7-OH, kratom and the emerging public health crisis for sale across the country

A patient, his doctor and other experts warn of dangers of 7-OH, which is touted as a derivative of kratom and is widely available, but packs far more opioid danger.
friends laughing together
Health Lab

LGBTQ+ people over 50 face more aging-related challenges

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and other sexual and gender minority adults over 50 have higher rates of mental health, disability, social isolation and health care access issues, though they also may have more connections than before to non-LGBTQ+ people in their age group.
Health Lab

AI chatbots spark mental health concerns, including psychosis risk

Artificial intelligence-driven AI chatbots have been linked to cases of suicide, delusions, psychosis and mental health issues. Three experts from Michigan Medicine explain what’s known and how to respond.