Title: Eating Disorders
1 Eating Disorders
- Teresa Lianne Beck,MD
- Assistant Professor
- Family Preventive Medicine
- Emory University School of Medicine
2Objectives
- 1. Recognize and diagnose eating
disorders. - 2. Understand the epidemiology and
populations that - are at special risk.
- 3. Understand the underlying causes.
- 4. Become familiar with the DSM-IV
Criteria. - 5. Know the psychological and physical
consequences. - 6. Be able to treat eating disorders using
a multimodal
approach. - 7. Take Action !
3CASE 1
- 18 y.o. female with no significant PMHx, presents
with 5 month h/o weight loss - Just completed her 1st year of college with a 3.8
GPA - She became a vegetarian after hearing a lecture
on cholesterol and heart disease in her biology
class, and began reducing the fat in her diet - She is 64 inches tall and has lost 22 pounds to a
weight of 95 pounds
4Case 1
- She drinks 2 cups of coffee and 3 cans of diet
cola per day - She eats ½ bagel for breakfast, an apple for
lunch, and a salad with kidney beans and fruit
for dinner - Denies laxative use. BM every 4-5 days
- She runs 4 miles a day, and does 100 sit-up
nightly - Her LMP was 6 months ago
- She denies ever being sexually active
5Case 1
- Constantly feeling cold
- Dizzy when stands up rapidly
- Hair is dry
- Feels bloated after meals
- Thinks that her thighs and stomach are too big,
despite her parents protests - Doesnt believe that she has a problem
6CASE 2
- 20 y.o. female presents for evaluation of
hematemesis - Admits to self-induced vomiting for the past 3
years - 62 inches tall, 63 kg
- Gorges and vomits 3-5 times per week
- Uncontrollable eating binges
- Feels guilty
- Smokes 1 pack cigarettes per day
- Gets drunk weekly
- Irregular menses
- Has not lost any weight
7Case 3
- 37 y.o. AA male who presents to his primary care
physician for annual exam - His weight is 289 lbs, BMI is 38, his BP is
150/90 - He does not exercise
- He admits to eating excessive amounts of food and
unable to control his binges 4-5 days/week - He eats to point of being uncomfortably full and
often eats when bored or stressed. - He admits to feeling ashamed and depressed about
his inability to control his eating or his
weight. - He admits to eating alone, often in his car.
8Spectrum of disordered eating
An Eating Disorder is about the expression of
underlying thoughts and feelings and NOT really
about food.
Risk factors Biological Psychological Sociocultura
l Family/interpersonal
Anorexia Bulimia Binge Eating
Eating Disorder Nervosa
Nervosa Disorder
(NOS) 307.1 307.51
307.50 307.50
Dieting
9Epidemiology
- Onset of Anorexia is bimodal, puberty (12-15y)
and late teens to early 20s. - Bulimia appears during late teens to mid-20s.
- Anorexia 1-2 female, 0.1-0.2 male
- Bulimia 4-20 female, 0.1-0.2 male
- Binge Eating Disorder 3-30 adults (40 male)
- 10 million females and 1 million males are
affected by eating disorders. - Most researchers agree these numbers are grossly
underestimated.
10Obesity
- 60 Adults in the U.S. are overweight. (BMIgt25)
- 30 Adults are clinically obese (BMIgt30)
- 26 of U.S. children are clinically obese.
- 45 of obese patients have BED.
- Treated as a medical problem requiring change in
diet and more exercise.
11Dieting
- 60 of US population is on a diet at any one
time. - 95 of those who lose weight will regain within
5 years. - 50 billion dollar a year diet industry.
- Dieting has become a normal way of eating.
- 35 of normal dieters will develop some form of
an eating disorder.
121999 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey 7
- 58 of students in the United States had
exercised to lose weight - 40 of students had restricted caloric intake in
an attempt to lose weight.
13Whats really scary?
- 80 of women dissatisfied with their body
- In one study, 45 of healthy, normal weight third
through sixth graders said that they wanted to be
thinner - 40 of them had actually tried to lose weight
- 7 of them scored within the high risk range of
an "eating attitude" test that detects or
predicts eating disorder behavior.
14Exploring the Underlying Causes
- Sociocultural factors (mass media, friends,
occupations, athletics) - Psychological factors (perfectionist, need for
control, all or none thinking, low self-esteem,
difficulty expressing negative emotion,
difficulty resolving conflict, mood disorders,
personality disorders, substance abuse, sexual
trauma) - Family factors (perfectionist, controlling,
repress anger, rigid) - Biological factors (serotonin, genetic
predisposition)
15Recognizing the signs and symptoms
- General (skips meals, preoccupation w/food,
unable to express feelings, worries about others
opinions, perfectionist, overly critical of self
and others) - Anorexia (wt. loss, strict dieting, perceives
being overweight, denies hunger, rituals,
excessive exercise) - Bulimia (visits restroom after meals, eats large
amounts without gaining wt., eats rapidly, mood
swings, unexplained disappearance of food, empty
wrappers) - Binge Eating d/o (weight gain, eats large amounts
rapidly, eats in isolation, eats to point of
being overly full)
16Signs/Symptoms of Anorexia
- Lanugo hair
- Scalp hair loss
- Early satiety
- Weakness, fatigue
- Short stature
- Osteopenia
- Breast atrophy
- Atrophic vaginitis
- Pitting edema
- Cardiac murmurs
- Sinus brady
- hypothermia
- Dry skin
- Cold intolerance
- Blue hands and feet
- Constipation
- Bloating
- Delayed puberty
- Primary or secondary amenorrhea
- Nerve compression
- Fainting
- Orthostatic hypotension
17Signs/Symptoms of Bulimia
- Mouth sores
- Pharyngeal trauma
- Dental caries
- Heartburn, chest pain
- Esophageal rupture
- Impulsivity
- Stealing
- Alcohol abuse
- Drugs/tobacco
- Muscle cramps
- Weakness
- Bloody diarrhea
- Bleeding or easy bruising
- Irregular periods
- Fainting
- Swollen parotid glands
- Hypotension
18 Medical Consequences of AN/BN
- Cardiac (arrhythmia, cardiomyopathy, HF,
hypotension, DEATH) - Metabolic (hypokalemia, hyper/hyponatremia,
metabolic acidosis/alkalosis, hyperlipidemia) - Endocrine (sick euthyroid, amenorrhea,
osteoporosis, fractures, growth retardation,
hypercortisolism, delayed puberty) - Hematological (anemia, neutropenia, impaired cell
mediated immunity) - GI (constipation, dental erosion, esophagitis,
gastric/esophageal rupture, colonic irritation,
fatty liver, intestinal atony, gallstones, acute
pancreatitis) - Neuro/Psychiatric (depression, anxiety, substance
abuse, suicide, seizures, myopathy, cortical
atrophy, peripheral neuropathy) - Skin (pallor, hypercarotenemia, hair loss,
lanugo, brittle nails, edema)
19Medical Consequences of BED
- Obesity
- HTN, CVD, CVA
- Hyperlipidemia, Diabetes
- Renal, Gallbladder disease
- Osteoarthritis
- Sleep apnea and Respiratory problems
- Infertility, complications of pregnancy
- Colon, breast, endometrial, prostate CA
- Depression, suicide, substance abuse
20Evaluation
- Diagnosis is based on DSM-IV clinical findings
- Clues in the history and physical exam
- Laboratory studies done to rule out other causes
of weight loss and/or complications - Often is the only way to convince the person
he/she needs help
21DSM-IV Criteria
- Anorexia Nervosa
- 1. Refusal to maintain adequate weight (less
than 85 of IBW or BMIlt17.5) - 2. Intense fear of gaining weight
- 3. Body image distortion
- 4. Amenorrhea (3 months)
- 2 sub-types restricting and purging
22DSM-IV Criteria
- Bulimia Nervosa
- 1. Binge eating (twice a week for 3 months)
- 2. Purging (vomiting, laxative, diuretics) and/or
excessive exercise, or fasting to prevent weight
gain - 3. Preoccupation with body weight or shape
- 4. Absence of anorexia nervosa
- 2 sub-types purging and non-purging
23DSM-IV Research Criteria
- Binge Eating Disorder
- 1. Recurrent binge eating (at least twice a week
for 6 months) loss of control eating very
large amounts - 2. Marked distress with at least three of the
following - Eating very rapidly
- Eating until uncomfortably full
- Eating when not hungry
- Eating alone due to shame or guilt
- Feelings of disgust, guilt, depression after
overeating - 3. No recurrent purging, excessive exercise, or
fasting - 4. Absence of anorexia nervosa
24 - Eating Disorder NOS
- Those who suffer, but do not meet ALL the
diagnostic criteria for another specific eating
d/o - Other Examples
- Chronic dieting
- Grazing
- An individual who repeatedly chews and spits out
large amounts of food - Late night eating
25SCOFF Screen
- S- Do you feel SICK because you feel full?
- C- Do you lose CONTROL over how much you eat?
- O- Have you lost more than ONE stone (13 lbs.)
recently? - F- Do you believe yourself to be FAT when others
say you are thin? - F-Does FOOD dominate your life?
- 2 or more Yes is a strong indication of an ED.
- Morgan JF, Reid F, Lacey JH. The SCOFF
questionnaire assessment of a new screening tool
for eating disorders. BMJ 1999 3191467.
26Suggested Screening Questions for AN/BN
- How many diets have you been on in the past year?
- Do you think you should be dieting?
- Are you dissatisfied with your body size?
- Does your weight affect the way you think about
yourself?
- Anstine D, Grinenko D. Rapid screening for
disordered eating in college- aged females in
the primary care setting. J Adolesc Health
200026338-42.
27History
- Requires a high index of suspicion
- Explore attitudes about weight loss, desired
weight, and eating habits - 24 hour dietary recall
- Detailed weight and menstrual history
- Be direct and ask about dieting, diet pills,
bingeing, vomiting, exercise, diuretic, laxative
abuse - Screen for depression, anxiety, substance abuse,
personality disorders, sexual/physical abuse, and
suicidality - Complete ROS for medical complications
28Physical Exam - Anorexia
- Specifically note state of nutrition and
hydration, height, weight (w/o clothing) used to
calculate BMI, BP and Pulse with orthostatics,
hypothermia - Skin (pallor), nails (brittle) and hair (lanugo)
- Chest (rhales), CV (arrhythmia), extremities
(edema, cyanosis), DTRs (delayed relaxation) - Abdominal and rectal (bowel sounds, epigastric
pain, heme positive stool)
29Bulimia
- Postural signs (volume depletion)
- Parotid gland enlargement (chip-munk cheeks),
teeth (discoloration, erosion), scars on dorsum
of hand - Abdominal and rectal (bowel sounds, epigastric
pain, heme positive stool) - Neurologic exam for focal abnormalities
suggestive of CNS tumor or seizure disorder
(rare)
30Binge Eating Disorder
- PE findings usually are normal
- Complete head to toe looking for signs commonly
associated with complications of obesity (HTN,
CVD, DM, DJD)
31Differential Diagnosis of Anorexia
- Affective disorder- unipolar, bipolar
- Personality disorder
- Schizophrenia
- Anxiety disorders, including OCD
- Substance Abuse
- Organic disease
- Infection, including AIDS
- Thyroid disease
- Diabetes
- Cancer
- Malabsorption
32Differential Diagnosis of Bulimia
- Organic disease
- Infection
- Thyroid disease
- Diabetes
- Cancer chemotherapy
- Malabsorption syndromes
- GI problems-GERD, IBD, gastroparesis, mass
lesions - Brain tumor
- Migraine
- Epilepsy
- Affective disorders- unipolar, bipolar
- Personality disorders
- Schizophrenia
- Anxiety disorders, including OCD
- Common obesity- compulsive eating
- Instrumental vomiting
33Differential Diagnosis of Obesity
- Hypothyroidism
- Hypercortisolism
- Deficiencies of growth hormone or gonadal
steroids - Medications
- Long-term glucocorticoid treatment
- Immunosuppression after transplantation
- Cancer chemotherapy
- Intensive glycemic control with insulin, a
sulfonylurea, or a thiazolidinedione - Neuropsychotropic drugs, particularly newer
antipsychotic and antiseizure medications
34Laboratory Evaluation
- Complete Metabolic Panel
- CBC
- ALKP, LFTs, amylase
- Lipids
- EKG
- TFTs
- LH, FSH, Prolactin, Estrogen
- Bone Mineral Density
35Treatment Options for AN/BN
- Inpatient hospitalization
- Outpatient psychotherapy (CBT)
- Medication (SSRIs)
- Self-help/Support Groups (A/B, OA)
- Family therapy
- Bibliotherapy
- Nutritional education
- Stress management
- Hypnotherapy, guided imagery, reality imaging
36Costs To Treat Eating Disorders
- Treatment often requires extensive medical
monitoring and therapy can extend over two or
more years. - Outpatient therapy can extend to 100,000 or
more. - Inpatient treatment can be 30,000 a month, and
many require repeat hospitalizations
37Costs to Society
- The direct (health care) and indirect (lost
productivity) costs of obesity in the U.S.
approximates 10 of the national health care
budget. - Amounts to 100 billion per year.
38Costs to the Individual
- Lost relationships
- Wasted talents
- Suffering families
- Multiple office visits for medical complaints
related to physical and psychological
consequences of disordered eating behavior.
39Role of Primary Care Provider
- Team coordinator
- Rule out other causes of weight loss and/or
complications - Obtain early psychiatric and nutritional
consultations and coordinate a multidisciplinary
team approach to management - Educate the patient about the medical
complications of the illness
40ANOREXIA
- Cognitive behavioral therapy
- Emphasizes the relationship of thoughts and
feelings to behavior, learn to recognize and
change pattern of false beliefs and reactions to
them - Limited efficacy
- Interdisciplinary care team
- Medical provider
- Dietician with experience in ED
- Mental health professional
41MEDICATIONS
- Overall, disappointing results
- Effective only for treating comorbid conditions
of depression and OCD - Anxiolytics may be helpful before meals to
suppress the anxiety associated with eating - Case reports in the literature supporting the use
of olanzapine
42ANOREXIA
- Set medical guidelines for outpatient management
- minimum acceptable weight
- weight goal
- weight gain of 1-2 lbs. a week for underweight
patients - maintenance of normal electrolytes
43BULIMIA
- Cognitive behavioral therapy is effective
- Pharmacotherapyhigh success rate
- Fluoxetinestudies reveal up to a 67 reduction
in binge eating and a 56 reduction in vomiting - TCAs
- Topiramatereduced binge eating by 94 and
average wt. loss of 6.2 kg - Ondansetron, 24 mg/day
44Anorexia/Bulimia
- Monitor weight, postural signs, cardiac rhythm,
and electrolytes - Address any metabolic or endocrinologic
complications.
45Hospitalization Criteria
- Loss of more than 40 of ideal weight (or 30 if
in 3 months) - Rapid progression of weight loss
- Cardiac arrhythmia
- Persistent hypokalemia unresponsive to outpatient
treatment - Symptoms of poor cerebral perfusion or mentation
(syncope, severe dizziness, or listlessness) - Psychiatric disturbances beyond patients
control, severe depression - Suicidal ideation
46Binge Eating Disorder
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Interpersonal Therapy (deals with depression,
anxiety, learn to handle stress, express
feelings, develop strong sense of individuality,
address sexual issues, past traumatic events) - Medications (SSRIs Prozac, Zoloft)
- Support Groups (Overeaters Anonymous)
- Monitor and treat medical complications (HTN, DM,
Hyperlipidemia)
47Prognosis
- Anorexia
- 5-20 mortality (cardiac arrhythmia's)
- More than 75 will regain weight to near-normal
levels, with return of menses, but abnormal
eating habits and psychosocial problems often
persist. - 50 become bulimic.
48Bulimia
- With treatment
- 50 achieve full recovery.
- 30 experience partial recovery.
- 20 show no improvement.
49Binge Eating Disorder
- Tends to be a chronic condition for those not in
therapy or support group. - 50 remission for those treated with CBT.
- Morbidity and mortality are directly related to
the many diseases associated with obesity.
50Taking ACTION!
- How can family and friends help?
- How can you help yourself?
- What other resources are available?
5110 Commandments
- Its not a diet problem.
- No one is to blame for the problem. Its no ones
fault. - Understand that he/she needs to eat three meals a
day, but do not take responsibility for her
eating. Dont hide food from him/her or push food
on her. When offering food to others, dont
exclude him/her. - Let him/her know you are willing to provide
support if she needs it. - If you have questions about the ED, ask him/her
directly. He/She can determine what he/she is
comfortable sharing.
5210 Commandments
- Do not share your opinions or judgments on
his/her size or weight, even if teasing. - Do not encourage any type of diet.
- Share freely and directly with him/her concerns
or other feelings you have which regard him/her. - Understand that he/she is also working on
communicating more directly. - Understand that he/she is not cured. He/She will
be struggling with the ED for quite a while and
will need continuing work on issues which cause
and perpetuate it.
S. Sobel. Eating Disorders. CME Resource.
2004-2005.
53How to help yourself
- ADMIT to yourself that you may have an eating
problem or disorder and be in need of help - TELL someonea friend, family member, family
physician, or counselorabout your concerns - LEARN that asking for help is a sign of strength
rather than weakness. Learn to recognize your
needs and be open about them to yourself and
others.
54Helpful Resources
- Campus
- Emory U. Counseling Center
- Emory U. Student Health Services
- Emory U. Hospital Psychiatry
- Emory Womens Center
- Student Educators on Eating Disorders (SEED)
- Community
- Atlanta Center for Eating Disorders
- Eating Disorders Information Network
- Ridgeview Institute
- Anorexia Nervosa and Related Disorders
- Emory Family Preventive Medicine
55National
- National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and
Associated Disorders (ANAD) - Academy for Eating Disorders (AED)
- Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eating Disorders,
Inc. (ANRED) - National Eating Disorders Organization (NEDO)
- Eating Disorders Awareness Prevention, Inc.
(EDAP) - American Anorexia/Bulimia Association, Inc.
(AABA) - Overeaters Anonymous (OA)
56Summary
- Eating Disorders are extremely common.
- Often underdiagnosed.
- They are the prototypical biopsychosocial
diseases. - It has little to do with food and a lot to do
with underlying thoughts and feelings. - Dieting is THE BIGGEST risk factor.
- Focus on prevention and early intervention.
- Most effective treatment involves a
multifactorial approach. - The earlier treatment begins, the better the
chance of recovery.
57THANK YOU!
58References
- Pritts S, Susman J. Diagnosis of Eating Disorders
in Primary Care. American Family Physician. 2003
67 297-304. - Kreipe RE, Birndorf SA. Eating disorders in
adolescents and young adults. Med Clin North Am
2000841027-49. - Becker AE, Grinspoon SK, Klibanski A, Herzog DB.
Eating disorders. N Engl J Med 19993401092-8. - Practice guideline for the treatment of patients
with eating disorders (revision). American
Psychiatric Association Work Group on Eating
Disorders. Am J Psychiatry 2000157(suppl
1)1-39.