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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study evaluated the impact on family relations of behavioral family systems therapy (BFST) versus ego-oriented individual therapy (EOIT) as treatments for adolescents with
anorexia nervosa
. Twenty-two adolescents meeting DSM-III-R
anorexia nervosa
criteria were randomly assigned to receive approximately 16 months of either BFST or EOIT along with a common medical and dietary regimen. BFST emphasized parental control
over eating
, cognitive restructuring, and problem-solving communication training. EOIT emphasized building ego strength, adolescent autonomy, and insight. Measures including body mass index, self-reported general and eating-related conflict, and observed general and eating-related communication. Both treatments produced significant reductions in negative communication and parent-adolescent conflict, with some differences between condition and between eating and non-eating related measures; the improvements in eating-related conflict were maintained at a 1-year follow-up. The study demonstrated that structured therapies for adolescent anorexia do impact family relations, even when the family is never seen as a unit during the therapy.
...
PMID:Family versus individual therapy for anorexia: impact on family conflict. 762 Apr 70
Recent attempts to reduce weight by patients with
anorexia nervosa
have sometimes led to life-threatening hematologic complications. This report describes an instance in which a patient with
anorexia nervosa
and pancytopenia drastically improved with treatment that included administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. The patient had lost 27 kg of body weight within 8 months. Even after admission, the blood cell count continued to decrease rapidly as follows: platelet, from 244 x 10(3)/microliters to 44 x 10(3)/microliters; erythrocyte, from 4.04 x 10(6)/microliters to 2.58 x 10(6)/microliters; and leukocyte, from 4.8 x 10(3)/microliters to 1.6 x 10(3)/microliters (granulocyte, 0.8 x 10(3)/microliters). Complications included pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, purpura, petechiae, hepatomegaly, fever, gangrenous stomatitis, and somnolence. Bone marrow aspiration disclosed absence of fat cells, marrow hypoplasia, and infiltration of the mature lymphocytes. Intravenous
hyperalimentation
, blood transfusion, gamma-globulin, and antibiotics were administered, but leukopenia and fever remained. However, administration of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor dramatically reversed the leukopenia and fever. With careful nutrition therapy, the patient's blood cell count and bone marrow normalized by the time of discharge. It was concluded that severe hematologic disorders may occur in patients with
anorexia nervosa
, and advanced treatment may be required to save the patient's life.
...
PMID:Case report: reversal of severe leukopenia by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in anorexia nervosa. 768 51
A 39-year-old woman with long-standing
anorexia nervosa
was admitted to our hospital because of extreme weakness and cachexia. During a
hyperalimentation
therapy, she developed chest pain, revealing the electrocardiogram and cardiac enzymes a myocardial infarction of the inferior wall. We suggest that
anorexia nervosa
does not 'protect' against coronary atherosclerosis, and that some of the cases of sudden death could be related to myocardial ischemia.
...
PMID:Anorexia nervosa and myocardial infarction. 796 Feb 53
With Russell's description of bulimia nervosa in 1979, followed by the DSM-III diagnosis of bulimia, a "new" eating syndrome found its official acceptance in the scientific world. In the two preceding decades clinicians and researchers gradually payed more attention to special forms of
overeating
. In the 1970s the nosographic conceptualizations of binge eating, bulimia, compulsive eating, or hyperorexia clearly shifted from a symptom level--closely connected to
anorexia nervosa
and/or obesity--to a syndrome level. Around the same time and independently from one another, clinicians from different countries proposed various descriptive labels for this new diagnostic entity, which, finally, became accepted as bulimia nervosa.
...
PMID:Emergence of bulimia nervosa as a separate diagnostic entity: review of the literature from 1960 to 1979. 798 45
Behavioral family systems therapy (BFST) was compared with ego-oriented individual therapy (EOIT) in a controlled, random-assignment investigation involving 22 young adolescents with
anorexia nervosa
. Each adolescent and her parents received approximately 16 months of outpatient therapy along with a common medical and dietary regimen. BFST emphasized parental control
over eating
and weight gain, coupled with cognitive restructuring and problem-solving communication training. EOIT emphasized building ego strength, adolescent autonomy, and insight into the emotional blocks to eating. BFST produced greater change on body-mass index than did EOIT, but both treatments produced comparable improvements on eating attitudes, body shape dissatisfaction, interoceptive awareness, depression/internalizing psychopathology, and eating-related family conflict. The implications of these results for the clinician who treats adolescents with
anorexia nervosa
are discussed.
...
PMID:Family therapy versus individual therapy for adolescent females with anorexia nervosa. 803 62
Sleep-related eating disorders distinct from daytime eating disorders have recently been shown to be associated with sleepwalking (SW), periodic limb movement (PLM) disorder and triazolam abuse in a series of 19 adults. We now report eight other primary or combined etiologies identified by clinical evaluations and polysomnographic monitoring of 19 additional adults (mean age 40 years; 58% female): i) obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), with eating during apnea-induced confusional arousals (n = 3); ii) OSA-PLM disorder (n = 1); iii) familial SW and sleep-related eating (n = 2); iv) SW-PLM disorder (n = 1); v) SW-irregular sleep/wake pattern disorder (n = 1); vi) familial restless legs syndrome and sleep-related eating (n = 2); vii)
anorexia nervosa
with nocturnal bulimia (n = 2) and viii) amitriptyline treatment of migraines (n = 1). In our cumulative series of 38 patients (excluding six with simple obesity from daytime
overeating
), 44% were overweight (i.e. > 20% excess weight) from sleep-related eating. Nightly sleep-related binge eating (without hunger or purging) had occurred in 84% of patients. Onset of sleep-related eating was also closely linked with i) acute stress involving reality-based concerns about the safety of family members or about relationship problems (n = 6), ii) abstinence from alcohol and opiate/cocaine abuse (n = 2) and iii) cessation of cigarette smoking (n = 2). Current treatment data indicate a primary role of dopaminergic agents (carbidopa/L-dopa; bromocriptine), often combined with codeine and clonazepam, in controlling most cases involving SW and/or PLM disorder. Fluoxetine was effective in two of three patients. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure therapy controlled sleep-related eating in two OSA patients.
...
PMID:Additional categories of sleep-related eating disorders and the current status of treatment. 810 56
A study was made on a patient with
anorexia nervosa
complicated with pulmonary tuberculosis treated with intravenous
hyperalimentation
(IVH). A 24-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of progressive loss of body weight during medication for pulmonary tuberculosis at another hospital. She was diagnosed as having
anorexia nervosa
. After the nutritional assessment IVH was performed. As a result of IVH, her body weight increased and her nutritional deprivation, (i.e., low visceral proteins, low branched amino acids, etc.) recovered. Nutritional support was effective upon treating pulmonary tuberculosis.
...
PMID:[Anorexia nervosa complicated with pulmonary tuberculosis]. 812 91
The physical complications of
anorexia nervosa
are common and can be life threatening, but psychiatrists and the increasing number of non-medical therapists involved in treatment programmes often overlook these complications. Cardiovascular complications are the most common, and the most likely to result in fatalities, particularly in those patients who vomit, purge or abuse diuretics, because of the electrolyte abnormalities induced. Osteoporosis is an early and perhaps irreversible consequence of severe weight loss. Further, there are dangers in rapid intravenous
hyperalimentation
.
...
PMID:The medical complications of anorexia nervosa. 840 83
Numerous studies have estimated the frequency of bulimia nervosa among high school girls and college women, but population-based trends in incidence in a community have not been reported. In this study we determined the incidence of bulimia nervosa by identifying persons residing in the community of Rochester, Minnesota, who had the disorder initially diagnosed during the 11-year period from 1980 to 1990. Using our comprehensive population-based data resource (the Rochester Epidemiology Project), we identified cases by screening 777 medical records with diagnoses of bulimia; feeding disturbance; rumination syndrome; adverse effects of cathartics, emetics, or diuretics;
polyphagia
; sialosis; or vomiting. We identified 103 Rochester residents (100 female and 3 male) who fulfilled DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria for bulimia nervosa during the 11-year study period. Mean +/- S.D. age for females at the time of diagnosis was 23.0 +/- 6.1 years (range, 14.4 to 40.2 years). Yearly incidence in females rose sharply from 7.4 per 100000 population in 1980 to 49.7 in 1983, and then remained relatively constant around 30 per 100000 population. The annual age-adjusted incidence rates were 26.5 per 100000 population for females and 0.8 per 100000 population for males. The overall age- and sex-adjusted annual incidence was 13.5 per 100000 population. Bulimia nervosa is a common disorder in adolescent girls and young women from 15 to 24 years of age. Histories of alcohol or drug abuse, depression, or
anorexia nervosa
were higher than expected in the general population.
...
PMID:Bulimia nervosa in Rochester, Minnesota from 1980 to 1990. 858 3
Hospitalized women with
anorexia nervosa
and/or bulimia nervosa and dietarily restrained and unrestrained, clinically normal women were provided with a multi-item breakfast meal. Eating patterns and hunger and satiety ratings were assessed. Subjects were offered three foods which varied in fat and carbohydrate contents. Anorectic-restrictors differed most from the control subjects: they had a longer meal duration, a slower overall rate of eating, more frequent pauses during the meal, and more short bouts of eating. They also displayed abnormal ratings of hunger and satiety: they were generally less hungry, had less urge to eat, and were more full than controls of bulimics. Both anorectic and bulimic patients showed more variability in total energy intake than did the controls. Patients usually displayed one of two patterns - either severe restriction or
overeating
. Abnormal hunger and satiety patterns indicating confusion typified the responses of bulimics; additionally, they showed more urge to eat in the post-meal period than did the controls. A higher proportion of fat in the initial part of the breakfast was related to a larger meal size for the bulimics. It is suggested that these techniques may be useful in evaluating the outcome of treatment for eating disorder patients.
...
PMID:Micro- and macroanalyses of patterns within a meal in anorexia and bulimia nervosa. 866 30
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