DefinePK

DefinePK hosts the largest index of Pakistani journals, research articles, news headlines, and videos. It also offers chapter-level book search.

Comparison of Oral Iron Alone with Oral Iron Plus Oral Ascorbic Acid in the Treatment of Anemia in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients


Article Information

Title: Comparison of Oral Iron Alone with Oral Iron Plus Oral Ascorbic Acid in the Treatment of Anemia in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients

Authors: HaFiz Muhammad Sajid Anayat, Bilal Javaid, Ijaz Nabi, Salman Mehmood, Madiha Rauf, Saba Gulnaz, Tauqeer Haider

Journal: Indus Journal of Bioscience Research (IJBR)

HEC Recognition History
Category From To
Y 2024-10-01 2025-12-31

Publisher: Indus Education and Research Network

Country: Pakistan

Year: 2025

Volume: 3

Issue: 6

Language: en

DOI: 10.70749/ijbr.v3i6.1839

Keywords: AnemiaChronic Kidney DiseaseOral ironAscorbic AcidHemoglobinNon-Dialysis CKD

Categories

Abstract

Objectives: To compare mean hemoglobin concentration in chronic kidney disease patients with anemia treated with Iron alone and Iron plus oral Ascorbic Acid. Methodology: This study was conducted at the Department of Nephrology, Allied Hospital, Faisalabad during the period from from 8 January 2025 to 8 May 2025. A total of 60 patients were randomly assigned to two groups: Group A (oral iron only, n=30) and Group B (oral iron + oral ascorbic acid, n=30). Hemoglobin concentration was recorded at baseline and after 3 months. Subgroup analysis was performed by age, gender, BMI, and CKD etiology. Results: Baseline hemoglobin levels were comparable between both groups (p=0.427). After 3 months, Group B demonstrated a significantly higher increase in hemoglobin (10.96 ± 1.11 g/dL) compared to Group A (9.57 ± 1.06 g/dL), (p=<0.001). Stratified analysis showed greater hemoglobin improvement in the combination therapy group across all subgroups, especially among younger patients, females, and those with glomerulonephritis. Conclusion: The combination of oral iron with ascorbic acid is more effective than iron alone in improving hemoglobin levels in CKD-associated anemia. This simple, cost-effective strategy may be particularly valuable in low-resource settings.


Paper summary is not available for this article yet.

Loading PDF...

Loading Statistics...