Interestingly even though
@picante has extremely low iron and ferritin she has the occipital issue.
Crux did you have high RBC / WBC counts?
Crux, have you described your regime to lower iron somewhere? I must look into it for my husband.
With occipital neuralgia and other types of headache, there may not be elevated iron, ferritin, or other blood markers. There can be anemia. Even with iron deficiency anemia, there can be iron deposits in organs.
It's been about 5 yrs. since a blood test, RBC normal, WBC only elevated with an adrenal crisis. Had high to high normal Hct., and HGB., but that can happen with iron overload,though not usually. Iron loaded people can be susceptible to infection.
In reading about brain iron deposition, it's kind of a different animal. Hemochromatosis people usually don't have the brain iron deposition that people with neurodegenerative disorders do, though some do.
I'm happy to share what I'm doing, especially with you.
- Copper glycinate supplementation. It's good for both iron anemia and overload. It mobilizes rather than chelates iron. I'm taking 2mgs. daily. ( I'm not sure that it would be good for starters, because it can raise nitric oxide, often high in migraine.)
- R-lipoic acid chelates iron, along with other metals. I take it separately from the copper and zinc. I take ~ 60-70 mgs. daily, just once. ( chelates brain iron in animal models)
- Green tea, chelates iron. 3-6 cups daily. (Had to add extra iodine because of the fluoride.)
- Quercetin chelates iron. Usually 250mgs daily.
- B12 competes with iron for absorption in the intestines. It's a good inos inhibitor, (inducible nitric oxide), good for migraine. I'm taking 1mg. daily. Used to take as much as 15mg.
- Melatonin is a good inos inhibitor, and , it chelates iron. double good. I take about 1mg. nightly.
- Zinc competes with iron, as well as copper, I take them separately. ~ 15 mg. daily. Zinc may down regulate inos.
I haven't tried any drugs that chelate iron. These supps. seem to work.