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Anorexia Nervosa (AN)

Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Drive for Thinness, intense fear of gaining weight >= 15% below expected weight Body image distortion (feel fat) Preoccupation with food Amenorrhea (>=3 cycles) Many anorexics also binge (they feel starved)

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Anorexia Nervosa (AN)

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  1. Anorexia Nervosa (AN) • Drive for Thinness, intense fear of gaining weight • >= 15% below expected weight • Body image distortion (feel fat) • Preoccupation with food • Amenorrhea (>=3 cycles) • Many anorexics also binge (they feel starved) • These tend to be less introverted, more impulsive, than the non-binge anorexics)

  2. Bulimia Nervosa (BN) • Recurrent episodes of binge eating (at least twice a week for 3 months) • Feel a loss of control during binge • Binge on high-caloric foods (i.e. not carrots) • Usually perceive binges as shameful, keep them secretive • Typically engage in purging—vomiting, laxatives, diuretics; also, intense exercise or dieting is common • Preoccupied with body shape and weight

  3. Prevalence of AN and BN • Increased prevalence in past half-century, with biggest increases in younger women (ages 15-24), ethnic minority groups (although still most predominant in Whites) Prevalence for Anorexia ages 15-24 (AN): 14.6 females/100,000 (approx 1%), 1.8 males/100,000 • Rates for Bulimia (BN) higher, roughly 2% of female teens (5x as many females as males) • AN & BN rare in non-Western countries

  4. Subclinical Problems • Approximately 40-60% of h.s. girls diet to lose weight. • Approximately 10-15% ‘purge’ or compensate for eating by vomiting, laxatives, diuretics, or use dieting pills

  5. Precursors • In early childhood: • picky eaters, digestive problems predict later anorexia • Pica, conflict regarding eating predict bulimia. • In school age children: • Approx 1/3 of those with later eating disorders try to lose weight, and many of those children have distortions in body image (see themselves as fat).

  6. Precursors, c’t’d • Early adolescence: • Disliking one’s body during pubertal development • Mood swings, and problems regulating (coping with) moods, especially in BN • Inhibited, overcontrolled personality (AN) • Difficult communication with parents (although research findings are inconsistent): • High conflict associated with BN • Enmeshed/overprotected, overcontrolled in AN • Parents who are preoccupied with diets

  7. Other risk factors • Other factors: • Media and cultural over-emphasis on thinness in women • History of sexual abuse (esp for BN) • Heritability – modest

  8. Treatment of Anorexia • First, weight gain (in consultation with nutritionist) • Hospitalization (brief) may be necessary for weight gain, other health concerns • Family therapy – best results • Family insists on weight gain in supportive way, mutual communication and problem-solving • Medication – especially if depressed • Individual therapy: cognitive-behavioral, as well as other modalities, more widely studied in adults than adolescents.

  9. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy • Focus on ‘cognitive errors’, e.g. • Selective abstraction (over-focusing on one aspect): “I cannot eat any carbohydrates, or I will become obese” • Magnification: “I’ve gained 2 pounds, so now I look so horrible I cannot wear a pair of shorts anymore” • Dichotomous (black/white) thought: “If I am not in complete control, I lose all control”; “If I cannot master being thin, my whole life will be a failure”. • Superstitious thought: “If I eat a sweet, it is instantly converted to fat on my stomach”. • Personalization: “I know I look horrible, and you are looking at me, thinking how horrible I look”

  10. Treatment of Cognitive Errors • Have adolescent state their beliefs out loud • Decentering: Ask if she is as aware of others as she thinks others are of her • Question the “shoulds” • Decatastrophizing: Questioning what would happen if the feared event were to occur • Reattribution: point out that these are automatic, re-occurring thoughts, and they cannot be trusted • Challenge cultural drive for ‘thinness’ • Teach self-soothing • Assertiveness training

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