Iron & Women's Health6 min readPublished 16 May 2026

Heavy periods and low iron: the connection most doctors miss.

Menorrhagia is the single most common driver of iron deficiency in women of reproductive age. The connection is rarely made until ferritin is in single digits and the patient has been exhausted for years. Here is the link, and what to do about it.

Patients with heavy periods often describe their symptoms in detail to their family physician for years before the connection to iron is finally made. Fatigue. Brain fog. Hair shedding. Sometimes restless legs. Their bloodwork is "normal" because the haemoglobin is in range. Ferritin was never checked. Eventually the picture is recognised — usually after the patient pushes for it — and the obvious link snaps into place.

How much is "heavy"?

Clinically, menorrhagia is defined as more than 80 mL of blood loss per cycle. In practice, very few patients measure their losses. More useful markers in the office:

If a patient describes any of the above, it is reasonable to consider their cycles heavy enough to drive iron loss.

The blood-loss math

Each millilitre of whole blood contains roughly 0.5 mg of iron. An 80 mL cycle therefore loses 40 mg of iron, or about 480 mg per year. For comparison, daily non-menstrual iron losses (skin, GI tract) are 1 to 2 mg per day — about 500 mg per year. A heavy-period patient is essentially doubling her annual iron expenditure, and very few diets can keep up.

The deficit is gradual. Iron stores deplete first; haemoglobin holds steady for months to years before finally dropping. By the time the CBC is abnormal, the patient has often had symptoms for a long time.

Why a normal CBC isn't reassuring

Haemoglobin is the last thing to fall. The body protects red cell production at the expense of iron stores. A normal CBC therefore tells you nothing about whether a patient is iron-deficient. The test that matters is ferritin.

In our practice, ferritin below about 30 ng/mL in a non-inflamed patient is enough evidence to consider iron deficiency in someone with consistent symptoms. Many internists treat at ferritins up to 50 ng/mL when the clinical picture fits — the literature increasingly supports this threshold over older cutoffs.

Two parallel tracks

When heavy bleeding has caused iron deficiency, the management has two components — neither replaces the other:

  1. Replenish iron. Oral iron is first-line for many patients. When oral is poorly tolerated or insufficient for ongoing losses, IV iron is an effective alternative.
  2. Investigate the bleeding. Gynaecology referral for evaluation of fibroids, polyps, hormonal causes, bleeding disorders, or other contributors. Treatment options range from tranexamic acid and hormonal therapy to procedural management.

When IV iron is the right answer

Modern IV iron formulations (ferric derisomaltose / Monoferric, ferric carboxymaltose / Ferinject, iron sucrose / Venofer) are typically given as a single or small number of infusions and replete stores rapidly.

What our clinic adds

The Iron Infusion Clinic at MED1 specifically handles the iron side of this picture: full panel, structured assessment, infusion on site when indicated, and direct communication with your family doctor and gynaecologist. Most referred patients are seen within the same week.

Visit the Iron Infusion Clinic Send a Referral

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More from the journal.

What Iron Deficiency Feels Like
Oral Iron vs. IV Iron Infusion
Iron Deficiency in Pregnancy