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EATING DISORDERS. MUDr. Markéta Žáčková Department of Psychiatry, Masaryk University, Brno. many are still clinically unrecognized it is estimated that general practitioners recognize only 12% of bulimia nervosa and 45% of anorexia nervosa. Anorexia nervosa. Characteristics.
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EATING DISORDERS MUDr. Markéta Žáčková Department of Psychiatry, Masaryk University, Brno
many are still clinically unrecognized • it is estimated that general practitioners recognize only 12% of bulimia nervosa and 45% of anorexia nervosa
Characteristics • profound disturbance of body image with pursuit of thinness (often to the point of starvation)
Epidemiology • 1% of adolescent girls • 10-20 times more often in females than in males • the prevalence of young women with some symptoms of anorexia nervosa is 5%
Aetiology • biological factors: • family genetic studies shows an association between eating disorders and affective disorders • social factors: • society emphasis on thinnes and exercise • strained marital relationships in family • psychological and psychodynamic factors: • pts often lack a sense of autonomy and selfhood • low self-esteem • extreme perfectionism
Diagnosis • DSM-IV diagnostic criteria: • refusal to maintain body weight at or above a minimally normal weight for age and heiht (e.g. weight loss leading to maintenance of body weight less than 85% of that expected) • intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat, even though underweight • disturbances in the way in which one’s body weight or shape is experienced, undue influence of body weight or shape on self-evaluation, or denial of the seriousness of the current low body weight • in post-menarchal females, amenorrhea, i.e. the absence of at least three consecutive menstrual cycles
specific types: • restricting type: • during the current episode, the person has not regularly engaged in binge-eating or purging behaviour • binge-eating/purging type: • during the current episode, the person has regularly engaged in binge-eating or purging behaviour • differential diagnosis: • medical illneses
Clinical features • the onset usually occurs between 13-20 years, most of aberrant behavior directed toward losting weight occurs in secret • some pts cannot control voluntary restriction of food and so they have eating binges followed by self induced vomiting, laxatives and diuretics abuse
Physical consequences • related to a weight loss: cachexia, sensitivity to cold, hypothermia • cardiac: small heart, arrythmias, bradycardia, ventricular tachycardia, sudden death • digestive-gastrointestinal: delayed gastric emptying, constipation • hormonal: reduced tri-iodthyronine, hypothalamic dysfunction, raised growth hormon levels • reproducitve: amonerrhea, low levels of LH and FSH • dermatological: lanugo, edema • hematological: leukopenia • neuropsychiatric: depression, mild cognitive disorder • skeletal: osteoporosis
Course and prognosis • in early stages, often fluctuating course with exacerbations and periods of partial remission • the course varies greatly, in genereal is not good - although weight and menstrual function usually improve, eating habits often remain abnormal and some patients develop bulimia nervosa • mortality rates are at around 15%, about a fifth of patients make a full recovery, and another fifth remain severely ill • bulimic symptoms may occur within 1-2 years after the beginning of anorexia nervosa
Treatment • restoration of weight and the nutritional state: • including treatment of dehydratation and electrolyte imbalance • weight gain of between 0,5-1 kg each week • combination of: • behavioral management approach • individual psychotherapy • family education and psychotherapy • psychotropic medication
Hospitalization in pts with: • weight 20% bellow the expected weight for their height • rapid weight loss • severe depression • failed out-patient care
Characteristics • recurrent episodes of eating large amounts of food (over 2000 kcal per episode) accompanied by a feeling of being out of control and an irresistible urge to overeat • the binge eating terminates by social interruption, physical discomfort, and most often by recurrent compensatory behaviour, such as purging (= self induced vomiting, laxative and diuretic abuse) or fasting • pts are usually of normal body weight, most patients are females and they often have normal menses
Epidemiology • 1-3% of young women • uncommon among men
Aetiology • biological factors: • raised endorphine levels? • social factors: • pts tend to be high achievers and to respond to social pressures to be thin • psychological factors: • also pts have difficulties with adolescent demands but are more outgoing, angry and impulsive than pts with anorexia (alcohol dependence, shoplifting, emotional lability) • predisposing factors include perfectionism and low self-esteem
Diagnosis • DSM-IV diagnostic criteria: • recurrent episodes of binge eating, characterized by: • eating in a discrete period of time (e.g. within any 2-hour period) an amount of foof that is larger than most people would eat • a sense of lack of control over eating during the episode • recurrent inappropriate compensatory behavior in order to prevent weight gain (self-induced vomiting, misuse of laxative, diuretic, fasting, excessive exercise) • the binge eating and inappropriate compensatory behavior occur at least twice a week for 3 month • the disturbances does not occur exclusively during episodes of anorexia nervosa
specific types: • purging • non-purging • differential diagnosis: • neurological diseases • epileptic ekvivalent seizure • Kleine-Levine syndrom
Clinical features • essential features are recurrent binge eating, lack of control over eating, selfinduced vomiting, binging usually precedes vomiting • episodes may be precipitated by stress or may occasionaly be planned • vomiting decreases pain and allow to continue eating without fear of gaining weight • binges consist of food high in calories (cakes, pastry), eaten secretly and rapidly • comorbidity with mood disorders and personality disorders
Physical consequences • electrolyte inballance: • potassium depletion resulting in cardiac arrhythmia, renal damage, urinary infections, tetany or epileptic fits • esophagitis • amylasemia • salivary gland enlargement • dental caries
Course and prognosis • the disorder is alrealy chronic, course is fluctuating • abnormal eating habits persist for many years, but they vary in severity • prognosis is better than anorexia nervosa, half the patients make a full recovery, the mortality rate is not raised
Treatment • patients are more likely to wish to recover • no need of weight restoration • usually out-patient treatment: • psychotherapy – cognitive behavioral therapy • pharmacoterapy – antibulimic effect of antidepressants (SSRI)
frequent disorders of eating that does not meet the criteria for anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa, but are of clinical severity • binge-eating disorder: • recurrent bulimic episodes in the absence of the other diagnostic features of bulimia nervosa • treatment similar to bulimia nervosa
Characteristics • excess body fat • BMI exceeds 30% • is associated with increased mortality
Epidemiology and aetiology • almost 20% of the adults in the US meets this criteria • genetic factors exacerbated by social factors • psychological causes do not seem to be of great importance in most cases, sometimes excessive eating seems to be determined by emotional factors
Course • chronic, indeed lifelong problem • most untreated adults continue to gain weight at the rate of approximately 1 kg per year
Treatment • behavioural weight control • diet • physical activity • pharmacological treatment • surgical treatment (indicated for very severe obesity – BMI over 40)
References • Gelder M, Mayou R, Cowen P: Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry, Oxford University press, 2001 • Krch FD et al.: Poruchy příjmu potravy, Grada, 1999