%0 Journal Article %T Intravenous iron overdose: treat the patient not the number %A Li Li %A Rana Biary %A Robert S. Hoffman %J Toxicology Communications %D 2019 %R https://doi.org/10.1080/24734306.2019.1615731 %X Abstract Iron overdose in its severest form is associated with fulminant hepatic failure and death. Indications for deferoxamine include a serum iron concentration greater than 500£¿mcg/dL. We present a case of an intravenous iron overdose to demonstrate the limitations of focusing solely on serum concentrations. A 50-year-old woman received a five-fold overdose of intravenous iron sucrose due to a medication error. Her only complaints were mild dizziness and abdominal pain. Her iron concentration 1£¿h after the iron infusion was 1301£¿mcg/dL. Due to the lack of vomiting, normal vital signs, and a normal anion gap, the treating team withheld deferoxamine and observed the patient. Her symptoms resolved spontaneously, her laboratory studies remained normal and deferoxamine was never administered. Iron sucrose is a large molecular weight compound (30,000¨C100,000 Daltons) designed to release iron slowly. We suspect the elevated iron concentration included iron that was complexed to carbohydrate and therefore not toxic. Clinicians need to know that intravenous iron complexed to carbohydrates may lead to serum concentrations that do not correlate with the degree of toxicity expected following iron salt ingestion. The decision to initiate chelation should depend on the patient¡¯s clinical and laboratory findings %U https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24734306.2019.1615731