Why fatigue, brain fog, cravings, or shortness of breath may not be “just menopause.”
When people think about menopause, they usually think about hormones like estrogen and progesterone.
But there’s another major player that often gets overlooked:
👉 Iron.
And your iron needs — and iron levels — change dramatically across your 40s and 50s.
Below is what every woman needs to know to stay energized, strong, and mentally sharp.
When menstruation stops, your monthly iron loss drops sharply, and your iron stores usually rise.
On average, postmenopausal women have 2–3× higher ferritin and transferrin saturation than women still menstruating.
But here’s what most women aren’t told:
Heavy or prolonged periods, short cycles, or erratic bleeding can drain iron faster than diet can replace it.
A notable minority remain iron-deficient due to:
Fatigue, anxiety, irritability, poor sleep, hair loss, palpitations, temperature intolerance, and brain fog can be iron-related — and often are.
That’s why getting tested matters.
Doctors often check only hemoglobin, which detects anemia — but not early deficiency.
Ask for:
✔ Ferritin (best indicator of iron reserves)
✔ Hemoglobin
✔ Transferrin saturation (TSAT) — optional but helpful
Optimal ferritin for most women: 50–100 ng/mL
(Some feel symptoms below 30 ng/mL even without anemia.)
Iron comes in two forms:
Found in:
Absorption is stable and not affected much by what you eat with it.
Found in:
Absorption changes dramatically depending on what you combine it with.
These strategies are evidence-based and can increase absorption by several-fold:
Citrus, peppers, kiwi, berries, broccoli.
Just 25–1000 mg vitamin C with a meal boosts absorption significantly.
Even a few ounces dramatically enhance non-heme iron absorption (“meat factor”).
Lemon juice, vinegar, sauerkraut, yogurt, kimchi—organic acids improve non-heme uptake.
These foods block or reduce non-heme iron absorption (but don’t need to be eliminated — just time them away from iron-rich meals):
❌ Tea and coffee (can reduce absorption by >50%)
❌ Cocoa, certain herbs, some vegetables (polyphenols)
❌ Whole grains, legumes, nuts/seeds (phytates)
❌ Calcium supplements or high-calcium foods
❌ Soy proteins and eggs
Solution: Have these between meals or 1–2 hours away from iron-rich meals.
Answer YES or NO to each:
If you answered YES to 3 or more:
You would likely benefit from an iron panel (hemoglobin + ferritin).
✔ Pair plant-based iron with vitamin C
✔ Add lemon or vinegar to salads/veggies
✔ Have coffee or tea after meals, not with them
✔ Combine small amounts of poultry/fish with plant meals
✔ Soak or sprout lentils, beans, and grains
✔ Prioritize 1–2 heme iron sources weekly
✔ Get ferritin checked yearly during perimenopause
(Clinically relevant, peer-reviewed)