“…This iron exists in two forms: as a diffuse soluble fraction called ferritin, in which the molecules are dispersed, and as insoluble aggregates of hemosiderin, which can be visualized by conventional microscopy (2). Although the liver is regarded as the chief storage organ, chemical analyses suggest that it normally contains up to 300 mg (3)(4)(5), which is only between one-quarter and one-third of what can be mobilized from total stores when healthy young males are repeatedly phlebotomized (6). Although little is known of the quantities present in other organs, hemosiderin can be seen in the reticuloendothelial cells of the bone marrow (7) and spleen (8), and there is some chemical evidence to indicate that significant amounts of storage iron may be present in skeletal muscles (9, 10).…”