For patients with iron deficiency anemia, intravenous iron infusions restore total body iron stores in one to two sessions—weeks or months faster than oral iron—while bypassing the gastrointestinal side effects that cause most oral iron regimens to fail. At TrufaMED in Surfside, physicians evaluate iron deficiency with laboratory testing and administer IV iron under hospital-grade safety standards in a concierge clinical setting.
Why Iron Matters
Iron is the central atom of hemoglobin, the protein that carries oxygen from the lungs to every tissue in the body. It is also essential for myoglobin in muscle, for the electron transport chain in mitochondria, and for multiple enzymatic processes including neurotransmitter synthesis. When iron stores fall, the clinical picture ranges from mild fatigue and hair thinning to disabling exhaustion, shortness of breath, cognitive fogginess, and restless legs.
Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in the world and affects a substantial percentage of menstruating women, pregnant women, endurance athletes, and patients with chronic gastrointestinal blood loss or malabsorption.
Diagnosing Iron Deficiency
A rigorous diagnosis requires more than a single hemoglobin reading. At TrufaMED we evaluate:
- Ferritin — the single best marker of total body iron stores
- Serum iron and TIBC (total iron-binding capacity)
- Transferrin saturation
- Complete blood count with indices (MCV, MCH, RDW)
- Reticulocyte count when indicated
Many patients present with “normal” hemoglobin but a ferritin below 30 ng/mL—a state of iron depletion that causes real symptoms well before anemia develops. A thoughtful read of the full iron panel is what separates a proper work-up from a check-the-box lab draw.
Oral Iron: Why It Fails So Often
Oral iron tablets (ferrous sulfate, ferrous gluconate, ferrous fumarate) are inexpensive and effective in principle. In practice, three problems limit their utility:
- Gastrointestinal side effects — nausea, constipation, metallic taste, and epigastric pain cause many patients to abandon therapy within weeks.
- Poor absorption — only 10–20% of oral iron is absorbed under optimal conditions. Calcium, coffee, tea, and proton pump inhibitors reduce absorption further.
- Slow repletion — correcting a significant deficit with oral iron typically requires 3–6 months of daily dosing, which is longer than most symptomatic patients are willing to tolerate.
Recent research in Blood has also demonstrated that daily oral iron dosing triggers a hepcidin spike that blocks absorption of the next day’s dose, meaning alternate-day dosing often outperforms daily dosing. (See: Moretti D et al., Blood, PubMed 26289639.)
IV Iron: How It Works
Intravenous iron delivers a large, bioavailable dose of iron directly into the bloodstream in a stable carbohydrate complex. The iron is taken up by the reticuloendothelial system, stored in ferritin, and released as needed for erythropoiesis and cellular iron demands.
Practically, this means a 1,000 mg total iron deficit can be corrected in one or two visits rather than six months. Symptomatic improvement often begins within 1–2 weeks, with peak benefit at 4–8 weeks as hemoglobin and ferritin rebuild.
TrufaMED Iron Renew Protocols
TrufaMED offers two IV iron protocols, selected by your physician based on your ferritin, weight, and clinical goals:
- Iron Renew 100 mg — $400 in-clinic ($450 mobile). Appropriate for mild-to-moderate deficits, maintenance after prior repletion, and patients new to IV iron.
- Iron Renew 200 mg — $670 in-clinic ($720 mobile). Appropriate for larger deficits and faster repletion when clinically indicated.
Both protocols are administered by a Registered Nurse under physician order in our Surfside clinic with continuous monitoring throughout the infusion.
IV Iron vs. Oral Iron—Head to Head
| Factor | Oral Iron | IV Iron |
|---|---|---|
| Time to repletion | 3–6 months | 1–2 sessions |
| GI side effects | Common (30–70%) | Uncommon |
| Absorption barriers | Significant | None |
| Adherence | Often poor | Not applicable |
| Cost | Low per pill | Higher per session |
| Physician oversight required | Minimal | Mandatory |
A review in The Lancet Haematology has summarized the growing role of IV iron in patients who fail oral therapy or need rapid repletion (see: Pasricha SR et al., PubMed 32949517).
Who Should Consider IV Iron?
- Patients with ferritin <30 ng/mL and symptoms (fatigue, hair loss, dyspnea on exertion, restless legs)
- Patients who have failed oral iron due to side effects or poor response
- Menstruating women with heavy cycles and chronic depletion
- Endurance athletes with documented low ferritin
- Post-surgical patients needing rapid repletion
- Patients with malabsorption (celiac disease, prior bariatric surgery, IBD)
Safety and What to Expect
Modern IV iron formulations have an excellent safety profile. Rare hypersensitivity reactions can occur, which is why TrufaMED administers every infusion with physician oversight, continuous monitoring, and immediate access to emergency management. Most patients experience no side effects. A minority notice transient flu-like symptoms 24–48 hours post-infusion that resolve on their own.
Plan for a chair time of approximately 45–75 minutes depending on protocol. Complimentary red light therapy is included with every in-clinic IV session.
Book an IV Iron Evaluation
If you suspect iron deficiency or have failed oral iron, a TrufaMED physician will review your labs, confirm the diagnosis, and recommend the protocol that matches your clinical picture. Call (305) 537-6396 or book online today.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if I need IV iron instead of oral iron?
The decision is clinical. Key indicators include a documented ferritin <30 ng/mL with symptoms, failure or intolerance of oral iron, ongoing blood loss that outpaces oral repletion, or malabsorption. A TrufaMED physician will review your labs and history to determine the best path.
How fast will I feel better after IV iron?
Many patients notice improved energy within 7–14 days. Hair, nail, and exercise tolerance improvements build over 4–8 weeks as ferritin and hemoglobin rise.
Is IV iron safe?
Modern IV iron formulations have strong safety data when administered under physician oversight. Serious reactions are rare. TrufaMED infuses every dose with continuous monitoring.
How many IV iron sessions will I need?
Most patients need one or two sessions to reach repletion, followed by periodic maintenance based on follow-up labs. Your physician will set a repeat lab timeline at your visit.
Can I still take oral iron after an IV infusion?
Often it is unnecessary. Your physician will decide based on your post-infusion labs whether maintenance oral iron is needed.
Does insurance cover IV iron at TrufaMED?
TrufaMED IV iron is offered as a concierge service and is not billed to insurance. HSA and FSA are accepted where applicable.