The recent negative trend in the cocoa thread brought up the fact that there is a lot of iron in raw cocoa and that is bad, bad, bad. OK, I only have a layman's understanding of the issue. I know that doctors i have talked to say that too much iron in the diet can increase the risk of certain age related diseases, but I am unsure why. From what I have read (non-scientific press reports), iron has been linked to increased risk of certain diseases through general population studies. What I want to know is if anyone has any research that points to a specific mechanism through which iron increases the risk of some age related diseases. For example: is it toxic in more than trace amounts (I haven't heard anything along these lines), does it interfere with metabolic processes, does it interfere with gene expression, etc...
In the back of my mind I speculate that maybe some of the bad news about iron has arisen because of co-factors in the population studies. By that I mean many of the people (men) who have heart disease and high levels of iron probably eat a crappy diet of meat and eggs fried in butter, drink too much beer, and don't get any exercise, thus their high levels of iron just an indication of their poor meat-laden diet, and not a factor in their devastated circulatory system.