Abstract

Anemia is frequently encountered in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), decreasing the quality of life and significantly worsening the prognosis of the disease. The pathogenesis of anemia in IBD is multifactorial and results mainly from intestinal blood loss in inflamed mucosa and impaired dietary iron absorption. Multiple studies have proposed the use of the polyphenolic compound curcumin to counteract IBD pathogenesis since it has significant preventive and therapeutic properties as an anti-inflammatory agent and very low toxicity, even at high dosages. However, curcumin has been shown to possess properties consistent with those of an iron-chelator, such as the ability to modulate proteins of iron metabolism and decrease spleen and liver iron content. Thus, this property may further contribute to the development and severity of anemia of inflammation and iron deficiency in IBD. Herein, we evaluate the effects of curcumin on systemic iron balance in the dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) model of colitis in C57Bl/6 and BALB/c mouse strains that were fed an iron-sufficient diet. In these conditions, curcumin supplementation caused mild anemia, lowered iron stores, worsened colitis and significantly decreased overall survival, independent of the mouse strain. These findings suggest that curcumin usage as an anti-inflammatory supplement should be accompanied by monitoring of erythroid parameters to avoid exacerbation of iron deficiency anemia in IBD.

Highlights

  • For patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), anemia is one of the major causes of hospitalization [1, 2] and has a debilitating effect on the quality of life (QoL) [3, 4], increasing disease morbidity and tightly associating the disease with mortality [5]

  • We investigated the potential contribution of curcumin in the systemic iron balance in an IBD setting using the dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced colitis mouse model

  • We found that erythroid parameters including red blood cells, hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume and hematocrit values were significantly lower in DSS-treated mice on the curcumin-supplemented diet (Curcumin-DSS), compared with mice treated with DSS without curcumin supplementation (Ctrl-DSS) (Fig 1A–1D)

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Summary

Introduction

For patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), anemia is one of the major causes of hospitalization [1, 2] and has a debilitating effect on the quality of life (QoL) [3, 4], increasing disease morbidity and tightly associating the disease with mortality [5]. IBD is an inflammatory disease consisting of a group of gastrointestinal tract disorders, namely ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, which are characterized by blood loss from the intestinal mucosa and reduced iron absorption. Up to two-thirds of patients with IBD develop anemia, with the most. Effects of curcumin in DSS-induced colitis mouse model.

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