Low Ferritin After Donating Blood Too Frequently

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Mitch

Member
So, in sept I saw endo for fatigue. He took a bunch of labs and I just reviewed them with naturopathic doc and apparently my ferritin was at an 8 and iron was low too.. endo didn’t make a big deal.. still dealing with fatigue and ferritin is sitting at a 30.. what’s an idea number to get that up to? Best supp or food to do that? Anyone have experience woth ferritin crash.. probably from donating too much
 
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Vince

Super Moderator
So, in sept I saw endo for fatigue. He took a bunch of labs and I just reviewed them with naturopathic doc and apparently my ferritin was at an 8 and iron was low too.. endo didn’t make a big deal.. still dealing with fatigue and ferritin is sitting at a 30.. what’s an idea number to get that up to? Best supp or food to do that? Anyone have experience woth ferritin crash.. probably from donating too much
The best thing to do,, stop donating blood stop donating blood. I know it’s a lot easier said than done. Lower your T dose, more frequent injections and ?
 

Mitch

Member
The best thing to do,, stop donating blood stop donating blood. I know it’s a lot easier said than done. Lower your T dose, more frequent injections and ?
Thanks Vince! I haven’t donated in months, starting to supplement now, t doses are low to keep me around 700... supplement for a month and run ferritin labs again? Any good supplement for iron? Is it a long process getting the levels up again?
 

Vince

Super Moderator
Thanks Vince! I haven’t donated in months, starting to supplement now, t doses are low to keep me around 700... supplement for a month and run ferritin labs again? Any good supplement for iron? Is it a long process getting the levels up again?
High levels of vitamin C, I supplement with 4000mg daily. It helps absorption of iron.
 

TorontoTRT

Active Member
There has to be other factors at work into how people feel. I’ve had ferritin between 19-30 since starting trt. Regular was about 125. But I don’t feel any different at all.
 

Shrades

New Member
So, in sept I saw endo for fatigue. He took a bunch of labs and I just reviewed them with naturopathic doc and apparently my ferritin was at an 8 and iron was low too.. endo didn’t make a big deal.. still dealing with fatigue and ferritin is sitting at a 30.. what’s an idea number to get that up to? Best supp or food to do that? Anyone have experience woth ferritin crash.. probably from donating too much

The same thing happened to me. I tried supplements, but they didn't help. I tried discontinuing donating blood, but then my hematocrit levels spiked again. So, I ended up getting an iron infusion, and it worked wonders. I felt so much better afterwards. This was in February. I've donated blood again, after which my ferritin level was still within normal range, so I haven't gotten another iron infusion.
 

VacationMan

Active Member
This happened to me once before. Hematocrit was high...mid 50's...so I went to the local blood donation center and gave double-red cells. While it helped reduce hematocrit, it tanked my iron/ferritin levels. Spoke with Christee at Defy and she suggested a product called Hemaplex. I took three of those capsules every other day *with* orange juice (to enhance absorption). Next blood work had my iron/ferritin levels in a good place.
 

Wolverine

Active Member
So, in sept I saw endo for fatigue. He took a bunch of labs and I just reviewed them with naturopathic doc and apparently my ferritin was at an 8 and iron was low too.. endo didn’t make a big deal.. still dealing with fatigue and ferritin is sitting at a 30.. what’s an idea number to get that up to? Best supp or food to do that? Anyone have experience woth ferritin crash.. probably from donating too much
My Ferritin was at 29 in September from donating too much due to high HCT. I took beef spleen capsules, 36mg of ferrochel, 1000mg of Vit C all together, and drank two orgain protein drinks (each with 9mg of iron). Just got labs back and now my ferritin is at 178. Rest of iron labs in good range. Also did not donate this whole time. Im stopping all iron supplements and reducing my weekly T cyp to 90mg (from 100mg) and moving to three equal injections throughout the week (from two). My HCT came in at 56.7 so Im trying to lower that without donating. Tired of the donation merry-go-round. Drinking at least 100oz of water per day. I think some of its dehydration as my Hgb was 17, so my HCT should be in the 51 range. I tested iron after stopping iron supplements for 48 hours. Ive read though that maybe you should be off of them for like 5 days, so possibly my results were a little artificially elevated.
 

Andyhamp

New Member
This happened to me once before. Hematocrit was high...mid 50's...so I went to the local blood donation center and gave double-red cells. While it helped reduce hematocrit, it tanked my iron/ferritin levels. Spoke with Christee at Defy and she suggested a product called Hemaplex. I took three of those capsules every other day *with* orange juice (to enhance absorption). Next blood work had my iron/ferritin levels in a good place.
How long did you take them?
 

SkyWarn

Active Member
So, in sept I saw endo for fatigue. He took a bunch of labs and I just reviewed them with naturopathic doc and apparently my ferritin was at an 8 and iron was low too.. endo didn’t make a big deal.. still dealing with fatigue and ferritin is sitting at a 30.. what’s an idea number to get that up to? Best supp or food to do that? Anyone have experience woth ferritin crash.. probably from donating too much
When I was donating every 3 months my Ferritin came back at 0 as in zero. I haven't donated in 18 months now. I lowered my dose of T and my total T is around 700. I felt better at around 1000 but the blood donating was a pita.
 

fifty

Well-Known Member
Real grapefruit nor grapeseed extract did anything for me. Try drinking a gallon of water spread out through each day.
 
I also had very low ferritin after donating blood regularly for almost 2 years when first starting TRT. Here are a few things I learned along the path to correcting it. 1st, stop donating blood. When you get labs done make sure you are not dehydrated, as this will give a false high hematocrit/hemoglobin level. I try to drink 20+ ounces of water prior to lab draws. I have not had an abnormally high hct/hg since then. If you continue having high hct/hg levels then definitely lower your overall TRT dosing and increase frequency as Vince mentioned above. Correcting the low ferritin takes months. Iron is a mineral, and like all minerals - zinc, calcium, magnesium, etc., you need vitamin D to help absorb them. Thus the reason milk has vitamin D added, to aid the absorption of calcium. Most of the population is low on Vitamin D. If you are not taking a vitamin D supplement, or getting regular sun exposure year round, then you are likely low too. So get your vitamin D level checked, and if low, supplement to get your levels up to mid-normal range. This will also take a couple months typically. Normal Vitamin D range is 30-100, try to get it above 50. Normal Ferritin level for men is 12 to 300, try to get it above 100. You can supplement with generic iron supplements or get you doctor to write a prescription for Ferrous Sulfate 325mg daily. Warning iron supplement can lead to constipation/hard stools. Skip an occasional dose if it becomes a problem. Taking a daily magnesium supplement can also help with the constipation. Think milk of magnesia. Good luck!
 

Vince

Super Moderator
When I did my labs 4 months ago, I worked out beforehand. My HCT came back at 51.5, I didn't donate blood. Checked my HCT 2 weeks ago, no work out, came back at 49.0
 

LEECHIPTURNER

New Member
I also had very low ferritin after donating blood regularly for almost 2 years when first starting TRT. Here are a few things I learned along the path to correcting it. 1st, stop donating blood. When you get labs done make sure you are not dehydrated, as this will give a false high hematocrit/hemoglobin level. I try to drink 20+ ounces of water prior to lab draws. I have not had an abnormally high hct/hg since then. If you continue having high hct/hg levels then definitely lower your overall TRT dosing and increase frequency as Vince mentioned above. Correcting the low ferritin takes months. Iron is a mineral, and like all minerals - zinc, calcium, magnesium, etc., you need vitamin D to help absorb them. Thus the reason milk has vitamin D added, to aid the absorption of calcium. Most of the population is low on Vitamin D. If you are not taking a vitamin D supplement, or getting regular sun exposure year round, then you are likely low too. So get your vitamin D level checked, and if low, supplement to get your levels up to mid-normal range. This will also take a couple months typically. Normal Vitamin D range is 30-100, try to get it above 50. Normal Ferritin level for men is 12 to 300, try to get it above 100. You can supplement with generic iron supplements or get you doctor to write a prescription for Ferrous Sulfate 325mg daily. Warning iron supplement can lead to constipation/hard stools. Skip an occasional dose if it becomes a problem. Taking a daily magnesium supplement can also help with the constipation. Think milk of magnesia. Good luck!
Thanks so much! I will try this immediately.
 
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