um like white moon
or something... lol
anemia.org said:Can certain medications cause a person to become anemic?
Yes, medications can cause anemia for many different reasons. For example, chemotherapeutic agents often cause anemia because they the bone marrow's ability to manufacture red blood cells, hemoglobin is carried by RBC's, If there are not enough RBC's, the body does not get the right amount of oxygen. Other types of medication-induced anemia are usually unpredictable, and not well understood (such as drug induced aplastic anemia). Some patients react to drugs because of inherited susceptibility, such as patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) deficiency. G-6-PD is an important enzyme that buffers the mature red cell against oxidative stress. In individuals who are deficient in G-6-PD, exposure to certain chemicals, drugs, or even some foods will result in the alteration of hemoglobin and breakdown of red blood cells.
First, how do you know you are anemic? Symptoms associated with anemia can be other things. Blood tests are how you would really know. Second, general medical advice these days is do not take iron supplements without a doctor having determined you need it and guiding you as to dose and length of treatment. Iron supplementation can cause cirrhosis of the liver, kidney failure, build up in joints that causes arthritis symptoms, many other sorts of problems. Excess iron is often not excreted and can build up in almost any tissue. Another reason to have a competent medical professional involved is to determine the cause of the anemia.
If a blood test determined you to be anemic what did they tell you when you got results? Could you ask a pharmacist or Doctor for a list of med that could make things worse?
Drug use poses some risk for everybody. Conditions and illnesses increase risk in general.
http://www.anemia.org/patients/faq/#causes The aplastic anemia portion below is a white blood cell anemia if I understand things correctly, a different thing than red blood cell anemia which I presume we are talking about here.
My point is we don't know if she is self diagnosed, if she is physician diagnosed the physician told her what to do and attempted to rule out causes that present an upcoming danger to the OP. If she has dealt with a physician on this, would she need us telling her what to take? A doctor would somewhat be guessing on quantity and duration of iron supplements but it would be a much better guess than she'd make on her own or we could give her. I realize most people who self treat with iron don't have bad complications, but they do occur. I'm a vitamin enthusiast for the most part but iron is one that has often caused harm, comparatively.danzaman said:to what our OP most likely has.
I have encountered people self diagnosing as iron deficient anemic for reasons like being pale or feeling weak.Generally, you aren't going to know you are anaemic without a doctor telling you,