Obesity is an excessive adipose tissue accumulation that may have detrimental effects
on health. Particularly, childhood obesity has become one of the main public health problems
in the 21st century, since its prevalence has widely increased in recent years. Childhood obesity
is intimately related to the development of several comorbidities such as nonalcoholic fatty liver
disease, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, non-congenital cardiovascular disease, chronic
inflammation and anemia, among others. Within this tangled interplay between these comorbidities
and associated pathological conditions, obesity has been closely linked to important perturbations in
iron metabolism. Iron is the second most abundant metal on Earth, but its bioavailability is hampered
by its ability to form highly insoluble oxides, with iron deficiency being the most common nutritional
disorder. Although every living organism requires iron, it may also cause toxic oxygen damage by
generating oxygen free radicals through the Fenton reaction. Thus, iron homeostasis and metabolism
must be tightly regulated in humans at every level (i.e., absorption, storage, transport, recycling).
Dysregulation of any step involved in iron metabolism may lead to iron deficiencies and, eventually,
to the anemic state related to obesity. In this review article, we summarize the existent evidence on
the role of the most recently described components of iron metabolism and their alterations in obesity.