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Iron Deficiency and Cycle Loss Correlation

Chronic blood loss during periods compounds iron deficiency, which in turn can worsen menorrhagia through impaired oxygen delivery to the uterus—a cycle that often requires both iron repletion and investigation into why bleeding is excessive in the first place. Understanding this bidirectional relationship prevents the common mistake of treating only the anemia while ignoring the bleeding cause.

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Why It Matters

Iron deficiency and cycle loss correlation refers to the practice of connecting heavy menstrual bleeding volume with fatigue, brain fog, breathlessness, and other low-iron symptoms to build a documented case that blood loss may be driving a nutrient deficiency rather than lifestyle or stress.

Women with fibroids, adenomyosis, or simply heavy cycles frequently have iron deficiency anemia go undiagnosed for years because the connection to menstruation is not made explicit. AI assists by helping women quantify bleeding through log-based estimates, align symptom timing with cycle phases, and produce a detailed symptom-to-cycle-loss timeline that supports requests for ferritin testing and gynecological investigation.

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