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Eating Disorders: by Pius Kigamwa

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Eating Disorders

By Pius Kigamwa
EATING DISORDERS

 The Eating Disorders are characterized by severe


disturbances in eating behavior.
 Anorexia Nervosa is characterized by a refusal to
maintain a minimally normal body weight.
 Bulimia Nervosa is characterized by repeated episodes
of binge eating followed by inappropriate compensatory
behaviors such as self-induced vomiting; misuse of
laxatives, diuretics, or other medications; fasting; or
excessive exercise.
 A disturbance in perception of body shape and weight is
an essential feature of both Anorexia Nervosa and
Bulimia Nervosa
Anorexia Nervosa
Diagnostic Features
 The individual maintains a body weight that is below a
minimally normal level for age and height (Criterion A).
 Individuals with this disorder intensely fear gaining
weight or becoming fat (Criterion B).
 The experience and significance of body weight and
shape are distorted in these individuals (Criterion C).
 In postmenarcheal females, amenorrhea (due to
abnormally low levels of estrogen secretion that are
due in turn to diminished pituitary secretion of FSH
and LH is an indicator of physiological dysfunction in
Anorexia Nervosa (Criterion D).
Subtypes

Restricting Type.
 weight loss is accomplished primarily through dieting, fasting, or
excessive exercise. During the current episode, these individuals
have not regularly engaged in binge eating or purging.
Binge-Eating/Purging Type.
 regularly engaged in binge eating or purging (or both) during the
current episode. Most individuals with Anorexia Nervosa who binge
eat also purge through self-induced vomiting or the misuse of
laxatives, diuretics, or enemas. Some individuals included in this
subtype do not binge eat, but do regularly purge after the
consumption of small amounts of food.
Associated Features and Disorders
 When seriously underweight, many individuals with Anorexia Nervosa manifest
depressive symptoms such as depressed mood, social withdrawal, irritability,
insomnia, and diminished interest in sex
 Obsessive-compulsive features, both related and unrelated to food, are often
prominent.
 Other features sometimes associated include concerns about eating in public,
feelings of ineffectiveness, a strong need to control one's environment, inflexible
thinking, limited social spontaneity, and overly restrained initiative and emotional
expression.
 Those with the Binge-Eating/Purging Type are more likely to have other
impulse-control problems, to abuse alcohol or other drugs, to exhibit more mood
lability, and to be sexually active.
Associated laboratory findings
 Leukopenia, mild anemia, thrombocytopenia,Dehydration, LFTs
Hypercholesterolemia Hypomagnesemia, hypozincemia, hypophosphatemia,
and hyperamylasemia. metabolic alkalosis (elevated serum bicarbonate),
hypochloremia, and hypokalemia,
 In females, low serum estrogen levels are present, whereas males have low
levels of serum testosterone.
 Electrocardiography: Sinus bradycardia and, rarely,
arrhythmias are observed.
 Electroencephalography: Diffuse abnormalities,
reflecting a metabolic encephalopathy, may result
from significant fluid and electrolyte disturbances.
 Brain imaging: An increase in the ventricular-brain
ratio secondary to starvation is often seen.
 Resting energy expenditure: This is often
significantly reduced.
physical signs and symptoms of
Anorexia Nervosa
 amenorrhea, constipation, abdominal pain, cold intolerance,
lethargy, and excess energy.
 The most obvious finding on physical examination is emaciation.
 hypotension, hypothermia, and dryness of skin.
 Some individuals develop lanugo, a fine downy body hair, on
their trunks.
 bradycardia. peripheral edema, petechiae, usually on the
extremities
 a yellowing of the skin associated with hypercarotenemia.
 Hypertrophy of the salivary glands, particularly the parotid
glands, may be present.
 Individuals who induce vomiting may have dental enamel erosion
and some may have scars or calluses on the dorsum of the hand
from contact with the teeth when using the hand to induce
vomiting.
Specific Culture, Age, and Gender
Features
 prevalent in industrialized societies, in which there is an
abundance of food and in which, especially for females, being
considered attractive is linked to being thin.
 most common in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia,
Japan, New Zealand, and South Africa,
 Immigrants from cultures in which the disorder is rare who
emigrate to cultures in which the disorder is more prevalent may
develop Anorexia Nervosa as thin-body ideals are assimilated.
 Anorexia Nervosa rarely begins before puberty, but there are
suggestions that the severity of associated mental disturbances
may be greater among prepubertal individuals who develop the
illness.
 Earlier onset associated with better prognosis
 More than 90% of cases of Anorexia Nervosa occur in females.
Prevalence
 Prevalence studies have found rates of 0.5%-1.0%
for presentations that meet full criteria for Anorexia
Nervosa.
 Individuals who are subthreshold for the disorder
(i.e., with Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified)
are more commonly encountered.
 There are limited data concerning the prevalence of
this disorder in males.
 The incidence of Anorexia Nervosa appears to have
increased in recent decades.
Course
 The mean age at onset for Anorexia Nervosa is 17 years, with
some data suggesting bimodal peaks at ages 14 and 18 years.
 The onset of this disorder rarely occurs in females over age 40
years.
 The onset of illness is often associated with a stressful life event,
such as leaving home for college.
 Some individuals with Anorexia Nervosa recover fully after a
single episode, some exhibit a fluctuating pattern of weight gain
followed by relapse, and others experience a chronically
deteriorating course of the illness over many years.
 Hospitalization may be required to restore weight and to address
fluid and electrolyte imbalances.
 long-term mortality from Anorexia Nervosa is over 10%.
 Death most commonly results from starvation, suicide, or
electrolyte imbalance.
Familial Pattern
 There is an increased risk of Anorexia Nervosa
among first-degree biological relatives of individuals
with the disorder.
 An increased risk of Mood Disorders has also been
found among first-degree biological relatives of
individuals with Anorexia Nervosa, particularly
relatives of individuals with the Binge-Eating/Purging
Type.
 Studies of Anorexia Nervosa in twins have found
concordance rates for monozygotic twins to be
significantly higher than those for dizygotic twins.
Differential Diagnosis
 general medical conditions (e.g., gastrointestinal disease, brain
tumors, occult malignancies, AIDS, serious weight loss may occur,
but individuals with such disorders usually do not have a distorted
body image and a desire for further weight loss. The superior
mesenteric artery syndrome (characterized by postprandial vomiting
secondary to intermittent gastric outlet obstruction)
 Major Depressive Disorder,
 Schizophrenia,
 Social Phobia,
 Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
 Body Dysmorphic Disorder.
 Bulimia Nervosa,
Bulimia Nervosa
 a. Recurrent episodes of binge eating (rapid consumption of a
large amount of food in a discrete period of time).

 b. A feeling of lack of control over eating behavior during the


eating binges.

 c. The person regularly engages in either self-induced vomiting,


use of laxatives or diuretics, strict dieting or fasting, or vigorous
exercise in order to prevent weight gain.

 d. A minimum average of two binge eating episodes a week for at


least 3 months.

 e. Persistent over concern with body shape and weight.


Subtypes

 Purging Type. This subtype describes


presentations in which the person has regularly
engaged in self-induced vomiting or the misuse of
laxatives, diuretics, or enemas during the current
episode.

 Nonpurging Type. This subtype describes


presentations in which the person has used other
inappropriate compensatory behaviors, such as
fasting or excessive exercise, but has not regularly
engaged in self-induced vomiting or the misuse of
laxatives, diuretics, or enemas during the current
episode
Associated Features and Disorders
 Individuals with Bulimia Nervosa typically are within the normal weight range,
 Between binges, individuals with Bulimia Nervosa typically restrict their total
caloric consumption and preferentially select low-calorie ("diet") foods while
avoiding foods they perceive to be fattening or likely to trigger a binge.

 There is an increased frequency of depressive symptoms (e.g., low self-esteem)


or Mood Disorders (particularly Dysthymic Disorder and Major Depressive
Disorder) in individuals with Bulimia Nervosa.
 There may also be an increased frequency of anxiety symptoms (e.g., fear of
social situations) or Anxiety Disorders.
 These mood and anxiety disturbances frequently remit following effective
treatment of Bulimia Nervosa.
 Substance Abuse or Dependence, particularly involving alcohol and stimulants,
occurs in about one-third of individuals with Bulimia Nervosa. Stimulant use
often begins in an attempt to control appetite and weight.
 Probably between one-third and one-half of individuals with Bulimia Nervosa
also have personality features that meet criteria for one or more Personality
Disorders (most frequently Borderline Personality Disorder).

 Preliminary evidence suggests that individuals with Bulimia Nervosa, Purging


Type, show more symptoms of depression and greater concern with shape and
weight than individuals with Bulimia Nervosa, Nonpurging Type.
Associated laboratory findings.
 Frequent purging behavior of any kind can produce
fluid and electrolyte abnormalities, most frequently
hypokalemia, hyponatremia, and hypochloremia.
 The loss of stomach acid through vomiting may
produce a metabolic alkalosis (elevated serum
bicarbonate)
 The frequent induction of diarrhea through laxative
abuse can cause metabolic acidosis.
 Some individuals with Bulimia Nervosa exhibit mildly
elevated levels of serum amylase, probably
reflecting an increase in the salivary isoenzyme.
Associated physical examination
findings and general medical conditions.
 Recurrent vomiting eventually leads to a significant and permanent loss
of dental enamel,
 There may also be an increased frequency of dental cavities.
 In some individuals, the salivary glands, particularly the parotid glands,
may become notably enlarged.
 Individuals who induce vomiting by manually stimulating the gag reflex
may develop calluses or scars on the dorsal surface of the hand from
repeated trauma from the teeth.
 Serious cardiac and skeletal myopathies have been reported among
individuals who regularly use syrup of ipecac to induce vomiting.
 Menstrual irregularity or amenorrhea sometimes occurs among females
 Individuals who chronically abuse laxatives may become dependent on
their use to stimulate bowel movements.
 The fluid and electrolyte disturbances resulting from the purging
behavior are sometimes sufficiently severe to constitute medically
serious problems.
 Rare but potentially fatal complications include esophageal tears,
gastric rupture, and cardiac arrhythmias.
Specific Culture, Age, and Gender
Features
 Bulimia Nervosa has been reported to occur with
roughly similar frequencies in most industrialized
countries
 In clinical studies of Bulimia Nervosa in the United
States, individuals presenting with this disorder are
primarily white, but the disorder has also been
reported among other ethnic groups.
 In clinic and population samples, at least 90% of
individuals with Bulimia Nervosa are female. Some
data suggest that males with Bulimia Nervosa have
a higher prevalence of premorbid obesity than do
females with Bulimia Nervosa.
Prevalence and Course

 The prevalence of Bulimia Nervosa among adolescent and


young adult females is approximately 1%-3%;
 the rate of occurrence of this disorder in males is approximately
one-tenth of that in females.
 Usually begins in late adolescence or early adult life.
 The binge eating frequently begins during or after an episode of
dieting. Disturbed eating behavior persists for at least several
years in a high percentage of clinic samples.
 The course may be chronic or intermittent, with periods of
remission alternating with recurrences of binge eating.
 The long-term outcome of Bulimia Nervosa is not known.
Familial Pattern and Differential Diagnosis

 Several studies have suggested an increased


frequency of Bulimia Nervosa, Mood Disorders, and
of Substance Abuse and Dependence in the first-
degree relatives
 Individuals whose binge-eating behavior occurs only
during Anorexia Nervosa are given the diagnosis
Anorexia Nervosa, Binge-Eating/Purging Type, and
should not be given the additional diagnosis of
Bulimia Nervosa.
 Kleine-Levin syndrome,
 Major Depressive Disorder,
 Borderline Personality Disorder.

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