Copper Deficiency: Symptoms, Causes, and Recovery

Copper deficiency means your body does not have enough of a trace mineral that, ounce for ounce, does an outsized amount of work — it helps you build red blood cells, keep your nerves insulated, lay down strong bone and connective tissue, and even put pigment in your hair and skin. Because copper sits at the center of so many different enzymes, running low can show up in surprising ways: a stubborn anemia that iron pills do not fix, a low white-cell count, numb or unsteady feet, brittle bones, or hair that loses its color. The most important thing to know is that true copper deficiency is uncommon in healthy people who eat a normal diet — but it is far from rare in two specific groups: people who take a lot of zinc (often without realizing it, in supplements or denture cream), and people who have had weight-loss (bariatric) surgery or have a gut that cannot absorb minerals well. The good news is that once copper deficiency is recognized, the blood problems usually reverse quickly with treatment; the catch is that nerve damage, if it has been present a long time, may only partly recover — which is exactly why this deficiency is worth catching early. This hub explains what copper deficiency is, why one shortage causes such scattered symptoms, what commonly causes it, and how it is diagnosed and corrected — with deep-dive pages for each of the major symptom patterns.


Symptom Deep-Dive Pages

Anemia & Low White Cells

Why copper deficiency causes an anemia that looks like (and is often mistaken for) iron deficiency, why it also drops the neutrophil count, and why the blood picture is the part that recovers fastest once copper is restored.

Nerve Damage & Balance

The most serious face of copper deficiency: a myeloneuropathy that mimics vitamin B12 deficiency, producing numb feet, an unsteady gait, and balance trouble — and why early treatment matters so much.

Bone & Connective Tissue

How copper helps cross-link collagen and bone, why a shortage can weaken bones and connective tissue (most dramatically in premature infants), and where the everyday evidence is strong versus thin.

Hair & Skin Pigment

Why copper is needed to make melanin, the link between severe copper deficiency and loss of pigment in hair and skin, and an honest look at how often this actually happens in adults.


Table of Contents

  1. Symptom Deep-Dive Pages
  2. What Is Copper Deficiency?
  3. Why One Shortage Causes So Many Symptoms
  4. Common Causes of Copper Deficiency
  5. The Zinc–Copper Connection
  6. How Copper Deficiency Is Diagnosed
  7. How Copper Deficiency Is Corrected
  8. When to Seek Care / Red Flags
  9. Key Research Papers
  10. Connections
  11. Featured Videos

What Is Copper Deficiency?

Copper is an essential trace mineral — "trace" because your whole body holds only about 50 to 120 milligrams of it (roughly the weight of a few grains of rice), and "essential" because you cannot make it and would not survive without it. Copper deficiency simply means the body's supply of usable copper has fallen low enough that the copper-dependent enzymes can no longer do their jobs properly. The official recommended intake for adults is modest — about 900 micrograms (0.9 mg) per day — and a normal mixed diet easily meets it, which is why deficiency is uncommon in otherwise healthy people.

Doctors usually confirm a suspicion of copper deficiency with blood tests. Two numbers matter most: serum copper (the total copper circulating in the blood) and ceruloplasmin, the main copper-carrying protein, which holds the great majority of the copper in your bloodstream. When both are low — typically a serum copper below roughly 70–75 micrograms per deciliter alongside a low ceruloplasmin — in a person with a fitting story (anemia, low white cells, or numb unsteady feet), copper deficiency becomes the likely answer. There is no single universally fixed cut-off the way there is for, say, low blood sugar; the lab numbers are interpreted together with the clinical picture. (For an overview of copper's normal role, see the Copper page; for the copper–iron–ceruloplasmin relationship in depth, see Copper, Hemoglobin and Ceruloplasmin.)

It helps to separate two very different kinds of copper deficiency:

One reassuring theme runs through the acquired form: when copper deficiency is found and treated, the blood abnormalities (anemia and low white cells) usually correct within weeks. The sobering counterpoint is that neurological damage, if it has been building silently for months or years, may only partially recover — which is the single best reason to recognize the deficiency early.

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Why One Shortage Causes So Many Symptoms

At first it seems strange that a shortage of one trace mineral could cause problems as different as anemia, numb feet, weak bones, and gray hair. The explanation is that copper is not used for one task — it is a worker passed from enzyme to enzyme, and each of those enzymes runs a completely different part of the body. Copper sits in the active core of these proteins, where it shuttles electrons (gaining and losing a charge) to make a chemical reaction happen. Take the copper away and each enzyme grinds to a halt, so the symptoms appear wherever those enzymes were doing their work.

Think of copper as a single specialized key shared among several locked rooms. Lose the key and every one of those rooms is suddenly inaccessible at once, even though the rooms have nothing else in common. Here are the main "rooms":

So the unifying idea is simple: copper is shared across many unrelated enzymes, so a single shortage is felt in many places at once. The pattern most doctors look for — an unexplained anemia with a low white-cell count, especially alongside numb or unsteady feet — is distinctive enough that it should prompt a copper test even though each symptom alone has many other causes.

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Common Causes of Copper Deficiency

Because a normal diet supplies plenty of copper, deficiency almost always means something is blocking absorption or increasing loss — not simply that someone ate too little. The causes worth knowing, roughly in order of how often they explain a real case:

A practical takeaway: if you have unexplained anemia or neurological symptoms and any of these risk factors — especially heavy zinc use or a history of weight-loss surgery — copper deficiency belongs on the list of things to check. Conversely, in a healthy person eating a varied diet, copper deficiency is an unlikely explanation for vague fatigue, and chasing it with supplements is rarely the answer (and, as the Toxicity hub explains, too much copper has its own risks).

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The Zinc–Copper Connection

If you remember one mechanism from this page, make it this: too much zinc causes copper deficiency, and the two minerals must be thought about together. This single relationship explains a large share of real-world cases and a great deal of needless harm from over-supplementation.

The biology is elegant. When the lining cells of the small intestine sense a lot of zinc, they ramp up production of a protein called metallothionein. Metallothionein binds metals inside the cell — and it grips copper far more tightly than zinc. So copper that enters the intestinal cell gets locked onto metallothionein and held there. Those intestinal cells are shed every few days and carried out in the stool, taking the trapped copper with them. The net effect is that high zinc quietly diverts dietary copper into the toilet instead of into the bloodstream. Because this builds up slowly, someone can take zinc for months or years before the deficiency declares itself — often first as a blood abnormality, and sometimes, tragically, only when nerve damage appears.

This is not a theoretical concern. Megadose zinc has been shown to induce copper deficiency, and there is a well-documented syndrome of myelopolyneuropathy and pancytopenia (nerve damage plus low blood counts) traced to the high zinc content of denture adhesive creams used heavily over time. The people affected were not taking zinc on purpose at all — the source was a tube of denture cream applied generously every day.

The practical lessons:

For the broader picture of how these minerals interact, see the Zinc overview and the Copper page; for the related iron interaction, see Iron and Copper, Hemoglobin and Ceruloplasmin.

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How Copper Deficiency Is Diagnosed

Copper deficiency is often found only because a doctor thinks to look for it — which is why knowing the risk factors matters so much. The diagnosis is usually built from a few straightforward blood tests interpreted together with the person's story.

Serum copper and ceruloplasmin are not part of the standard chemistry panel, so they have to be ordered specifically. That said, when symptoms are vague, a doctor will often start with the common, inexpensive screens — including a routine chemistry panel and CBC (see the Comprehensive Metabolic Panel page for what a standard panel does and does not cover) — and add the copper-specific tests once the pattern or the risk factors point that way. If neurological symptoms are present, imaging of the spinal cord (MRI) may also be done, since copper-deficiency myelopathy can produce a B12-like signal change in the cord.

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How Copper Deficiency Is Corrected

Treatment rests on three principles: remove the cause, replace the copper, and recheck the response. The approach is generally very effective for the blood abnormalities and partly effective for the nerves, depending on how long the deficiency went unnoticed.

A word of caution that cuts the other way: copper supplements are not a casual wellness add-on. In someone who is not deficient, extra copper provides no benefit and can be harmful in excess, and it would be exactly wrong — even dangerous — in Wilson's disease, the genetic condition in which copper accumulates. Copper replacement is treatment for a documented deficiency, guided by tests, not a supplement to take on a hunch. (For the risks of too much, see the Copper Toxicity hub.)

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When to Seek Care / Red Flags

Most copper-deficiency symptoms come on gradually rather than suddenly, so the usual right step is not the emergency room but a thoughtful conversation with your doctor and a few blood tests — particularly if you have a known risk factor. Make a prompt (non-emergency) appointment to be evaluated if you have:

Seek more urgent care if neurological symptoms are progressing quickly — rapidly worsening weakness or numbness, or balance trouble bad enough to cause falls — since fast-moving nerve symptoms always warrant a prompt evaluation regardless of the cause. And if anemia is severe enough to cause chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or fainting, that is an emergency in its own right. For related symptoms and conditions, see Anemia and Neurology.

The encouraging bottom line: copper deficiency is uncommon, it is usually preventable, and when it is caught it is treatable — the blood recovers reliably, and the nerves recover best when the problem is found early. The two most useful habits are not over-doing zinc and staying on top of nutrient monitoring after bariatric surgery.

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Key Research Papers

  1. Collins JF, Klevay LM (2011). Copper. Advances in Nutrition;2(6):520-522. — DOI: 10.3945/an.111.001222
  2. Myint ZW, Oo TH, Thein KZ, Tun AM, Saeed H (2018). Copper deficiency anemia: review article. Annals of Hematology;97(9):1527-1534. — DOI: 10.1007/s00277-018-3407-5
  3. Lazarchick J (2012). Update on anemia and neutropenia in copper deficiency. Current Opinion in Hematology;19(1):58-60. — DOI: 10.1097/MOH.0b013e32834da9d2
  4. Kumar N (2006). Copper Deficiency Myelopathy (Human Swayback). Mayo Clinic Proceedings;81(10):1371-1384. — DOI: 10.4065/81.10.1371
  5. Kumar N, Crum B, Petersen RC, Vernino S, Ahlskog JE (2004). Copper Deficiency Myelopathy. Archives of Neurology;61(5):762-766. — DOI: 10.1001/archneur.61.5.762
  6. Kumar N, Gross JB, Ahlskog JE (2004). Copper deficiency myelopathy produces a clinical picture like subacute combined degeneration. Neurology;63(1):33-39. — DOI: 10.1212/01.WNL.0000132644.52613.FA
  7. Jaiser SR, Winston GP (2010). Copper deficiency myelopathy. Journal of Neurology;257(6):869-881. — DOI: 10.1007/s00415-010-5511-x
  8. Hedera P, Peltier A, Fink JK, Wilcock S, London Z, Brewer GJ (2009). Myelopolyneuropathy and pancytopenia due to copper deficiency and high zinc levels of unknown origin II. The denture cream is a primary source of excessive zinc. NeuroToxicology;30(6):996-999. — DOI: 10.1016/j.neuro.2009.08.008
  9. Ernst B, Thurnheer M, Schultes B (2009). Copper Deficiency After Gastric Bypass Surgery. Obesity;17(11):1980-1981. — DOI: 10.1038/oby.2009.237
  10. Chin A (2018). Copper Deficiency Anemia and Neutropenia Due to Ketogenic Diet. Pediatrics;141(5):e20173286. — DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-3286

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Connections

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