|
Signs and Symptoms - Distorted body image
- Dissatisfaction with body
- Pronounced weight loss
- Low body fat
- Excessive fear of becoming fat
- Reduction in food intake and/or food refusal
- Preoccupation with calories, food, and food preparation
- Loss or absence of menstrual periods (in women)Extensive exercise
- Dry, flaky, or cracked skin
- Dry, sparse hair on scalp
- Pale, downy hair on face and body
- Hypothermia
- Depression
Anorexia nervosa is a psychological disorder that most often affects young women between the ages of 12 and 21. In fact, less than 10 percent of all those with anorexia nervosa are males. The problem typically occurs in someone with a distorted body image who desperately wants to lose weight. She may start by eliminating high-calorie foods and snacks from her diet, then progress to skipping meals altogether, or eating smaller portions. Often, a person with anorexia nervosa may eat only a few small items of food a day, such as an apple and a few carrot sticks. To burn off even more calories, many sufferers become obsessive exercisers.Unfortunately, when the body doesn't have a store of calories to use as fuel for everyday functions (such as breathing, walking, moving), It starts to burn its own muscle cells in order to come up with the calories it needs to survive. In deed, the anorexic's heart muscle can often be. come so weak and depleted that it stops beating, Many victims of severe anorexia die of heart attacks-even though they may be in their teens or twenties. Other consequences of anorexia include delayed sexual maturation gastrointestinal disorders (including constipation), and liver and kidney damage.Anorexia doesn't have one specific cause. Risk factors include: Low self-esteemPerfectionist personality High expectations, stress due to multiple responsibilities and/or tight schedules Ambivalence about independence Early puberty Conventional Medical Treatment Sychotherapy, rather than drug therapy, is the first line of treatment for anorexia. A mental health professional trained to treat eating disorders encourages the patient to gain weight by increasing daily caloric intake by 300 calories every two weeks. The psychotherapist also tries to determine the psychosocial issues affecting the sufferer's body image, and seek to build her sense of self-worth and a more positive body image. In severe cases, bed rest with supervised meals are called for until patient has gained 10 to 20 pounds. Since the goal in treating anorexia is to encourage the individual to get better on her own, forced or tube feeding is usually avoided. In instances where the individual is clinically depressed, an anti-depressant may be given.
|