Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Perception of body size, subjective experience of body image distortions and differentiation of body concept in the human figure drawing were assessed in adolescent anorexia nervosa patients and controls shortly after hospital admission, and again 6 months later during the recuperative phase. Size estimation was not found to be a distinguishing variable, as both groups exhibited overestimation tendencies of comparable magnitude at both time periods. By contrast, experiences denoting estrangement from the body, insensitivity to body sensations, and weakness of body boundaries were more prevalent in anorexics, and persisted at high levels after frank symptoms of weight and eating disorder had subsided. Anorexics were also shown to depict the human figure with less differentiation relative to controls. Within the anorexic sample the presence of vomiting was linked to greater subjective experience of body image distortion, and such phenomena appear to be a more enduring feature in this subgroup. Overall, the results were viewed as lending support to the argument that defects in body image formation render the anorexic vulnerable to their manifest pathology, which is itself activated by maturational conflicts unique to adolescence.
...
PMID:Body image disturbance in anorexia nervosa during the acute and recuperative phase. 39 May 92

Thirty patients were selected for a prospective study according to two criteria: (i) an irresistible urge to overeat (bulimia nervosa), followed by self-induced vomiting or purging; (ii) a morbid fear of becoming fat. The majority of the patients had a previous history of true or cryptic anorexia nervosa. Self-induced vomiting and purging are secondary devices used by the patients to counteract the effects of overeating and prevent a gain in weight. These devices are dangerous for they are habit-forming and lead to potassium loss and other physical complications. In common with true anorexia nervosa, the patients were determined to keep their weight below a self-imposed threshold. Its level was set below the patient's healthy weight, defined as the weight reached before the onset of the eating disorder. In contrast with true anorexia nervosa, the patients tended to be heavier, more active sexually, and more likely to menstruate regularly and remain fertile. Depressive symptoms were often severe and distressing and led to a high risk of suicide. A theoretical model is described to emphasize the interdependence of the various symptoms and the role of self-perpetuating mechanisms in the maintenance of the disorder. The main aims of treatment are (i) to interrupt the vicious circle of overeating and self-induced vomiting (or purging), (ii) to persuade the patients to accept a higher weight. Prognosis appears less favourable than in uncomplicated anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:Bulimia nervosa: an ominous variant of anorexia nervosa. 48 66

Persons who contacted the Anorexia/Bulimia Association of Norway for information and stated that they had an eating disorder were asked to participate in this questionnaire study. The answers from the 32 women who fulfilled the DSM-III-R criteria for bulimia nervosa are presented. Usually the women's eating problems had started in the teens after a period of voluntary dieting. The mean duration of bulimia nervosa was six years. 31% had a history of anorexia nervosa. At the time of the study almost all had normal body weight, but nevertheless felt overweight. 78% practised self-induced vomiting, 22% used laxatives and 16% used diuretics to reduce weight. Depressive and anxiety symptoms were common in connection with the overeating episodes, but also more generally, which interfered with everyday life. Somatic symptoms (abdominal pain, diarrhoea, constipation, dyspepsia, headache, dry mouth and eyes, parotid gland swelling, muscular symptoms, fatigue, and oligomenorrhoea) were also common.
...
PMID:[Bulimia nervosa and self-reported symptoms. A questionnaire study among 32 women with bulimia nervosa]. 147 Nov 6

A 28-year-old woman with nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain had been hospitalized elsewhere on 13 separate occasions over the year before this admission for similar episodes thought to be secondary to acute pancreatitis. She had undergone repeated work-ups including endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, computed tomographic scan, and exploratory laparotomy. There was a discrepancy between her unremarkable physical examination and extremely elevated amylase (3,210 U/L) which suggested nonpancreatic hyperamylasemia; normal serum pancreatic isoamylase, trypsinogen, and lipase confirmed this suspicion. The patient was noted to have self-induced vomiting in the hospital which she admitted was frequent behavior. her psychiatric disturbance was characterized as an atypical eating disorder. This case illustrates that hyperamylasemia in association with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting may not be secondary to pancreatitis and that use of a second serum marker (such as trypsinogen, lipase, or isoamylase) helps to establish a definitive diagnosis.
...
PMID:Atypical eating disorder masquerading as recurrent acute pancreatitis: the value of multiple pancreatic serological markers. 168 31

Many anorexic and bulimic patients induce vomiting by inserting their fingers in the oral cavity. We hypothesized that finger pressure could lead to tooth movement, eventually resulting in the development of orthodontic abnormalities, particularly open-bite. Twenty-four females with eating disorders and 24 matched controls underwent orthodontic examination and completed a dental questionnaire. Orthodontic abnormalities were more commonly found in the eating disorder group and open-bite was the most common abnormality seen. The presence of open-bite or other orthodontic abnormality was not associated with patient reports of self-induced vomiting, which would suggest that digital pressure was not the causative factor. The dental appearances indicated that the skeletal base pattern was abnormal in many cases. The findings could, in part, be accounted for by the fact that patients with eating disorders were less likely than controls to have completed courses of orthodontic treatment. Alternatively, the orthodontic abnormality may have contributed to the development of an eating disorder. Further study of this area is proposed.
...
PMID:Orthodontic abnormalities in patients with eating disorders. 191 77

Bulimia is an eating disorder characterized by binge eating followed by purging, i.e. self-induced vomiting, abuse of cathartic or diuretic drugs, increased activity or periods of restrictive dieting. Studies show that persons with bulimia are prone to a number of medical complications as a result of binge-eating, vomiting and drug abuse. Vomiting is the most harmful in terms of medical risk, and also the most common source of complications. Both vomiting and purging lead to loss of body fluids and electrolytes, often resulting in hypokalemia. Vomiting also leads to sore throats and dental problems such as destruction of enamel. Gastric dilatation is the only complication directly associated with binge-eating. Harmless symptoms, such as abdominal pain, diarrhoea, constipation and neuromuscular symptoms are common. This article discusses the pathophysiology behind the complications and their treatment.
...
PMID:[Somatic and biochemical complications in bulimia]. 218 71

Frequently, MPD patients present themselves to the clinician with a variety of psychophysiological symptoms. Eating-disorder symptoms may be one of these, and may include the following: binge eating, self-induced vomiting, laxative abuse, excessive exercising, body image distortion, self-starvation, fluctuations in body weight, and nausea. Following are five cases in whom the pathological eating behavior was a manifestation of an underlying multiple personality disorder. The pathological eating behavior was so severe that some patients matched DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria for an eating disorder. Clinicians dealing with eating disorders should be aware that some patients may represent a subgroup in whom the underlying cause for the eating disorder may be MPD. These patients seldom respond to conventional treatment modalities used in eating-disorders programs, and only when the underlying multiplicity is identified and treated by a trained clinician, will the patient's eating-disorder symptoms improve.
...
PMID:Covert multiple personality underlying eating disorders. 222 Dec 8

Although it is widely recognized that eating disorders primarily begin during the adolescent period, the centrality of obsessive-compulsive symptomatology and dynamisms and their relationship to adolescent conflict and development has not been generally accepted or understood. Social pressures toward conformity with the ideal of feminine thinness, which are especially influential during the adolescent period, combine with obsessive-compulsive predispositions to produce eating disorder symptoms and patterns of behavior. Obsessive preoccupation with images of food as well as ruminative calorie counting, and ritualistic behavior regarding food, use of laxatives, and vomiting, together with an underlying focus on control, undoing and other obsessive-compulsive defenses, and a sado-masochistic orientation to the body all point to an essential obsessive-compulsive disorder. The presence of dysphoric affect and the erratic success of antidepressant medication with eating disorder patients has led to a belief in an underlying affective disorder. However, careful assessment of eleven studies presenting differential diagnostic data regarding anorexia nervosa reveals that noneating related obsessive-compulsive patterns and symptoms are second overall in incidence to depressive patterns and symptoms. With critical re-evaluation of data presented, the obsessive-compulsive condition equals or supersedes the depressive one in many samples. Moreover, given the intense achievement orientation of persons with obsessive-compulsive illness, along with other psychodynamic factors, depressive symptoms could well be considered a secondary breakdown effect. If the all-pervasive obsessive-compulsive nature of eating-related symptomatology discussed here is taken into consideration, depressive symptoms must be considered either secondary or incidental. As patients with eating disorders are notoriously secretive and oftentimes misleading about their symptoms and themselves, a diagnostic assessment of such patients in intensive treatment at a long-term hospital facility was carried out. Compared with a control group randomly selected from the remainder of the hospital patient population, obsessive-compulsive manifestations of rumination, ritualistic behavior, excessive cleanliness, excessive orderliness, perfectionism, miserliness, rigidity, and scrupulousness and self-righteousness were all significantly associated with the eating disorder patient group. The current eating disorder picture, therefore, appears to be a modern form of obsessive-compulsive illness beginning during the adolescent period.
...
PMID:Adolescence and eating disorder: the obsessive-compulsive syndrome. 223 95

The case of a young women with dysphagia, regurgitation, and weight loss, who was diagnosed as having anorexia nervosa but in whom reevaluation showed that achalasia was causing the symptoms, is presented together with related observations. Misinterpretation of esophageal symptoms may occur not only as a consequence of inadequate history taking and of being biased by a patient's emaciation, age, and gender, which leads to view certain aspects of the patient's history and behavior as suggesting a pathologic attitude towards eating and body weight, but also as a consequence of a misinterpretation of the symptoms as indicative of an eating disorder by the patients themselves. In some cases a disordered attitude toward eating and body weight may develop together or coexist with achalasia. The clinical evaluation of patients with symptoms suggestive of anorexia nervosa but also of bulimia nervosa should include the taking of a thorough history regarding swallowing and vomiting in order to recognize a possible esophageal motor disorder.
...
PMID:Symptoms of achalasia in young women mistaken as indicating primary anorexia nervosa. 227 21

Bulimia nervosa, an eating disorder now recognized with increasing frequency, is receiving growing attention because of purported complications. Recent claims of a high frequency of erosions, ulceration, and bleeding in the esophagus, ascribed to repeated, self-induced vomiting, prompted us to investigate by endoscopy the upper gastrointestinal mucosa in 37 consecutive patients with long-standing bulimia nervosa. The endoscopic appearance of esophageal and gastric mucosa was normal in 23 patients. Signs of mild esophagitis observed in eight patients were not related to the duration or severity of bulimic behavior or to symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux; two of these eight patients had sliding hiatal hernias. The remaining six patients were found to have superficial mucosal erythema in the stomach or duodenum, but none showed actual erosions, ulcers, or bleeding. Our observations suggest that, in contrast to reports by others, mucosal injury consequent to chronic, self-induced vomiting in patients with bulimia nervosa is relatively infrequent and limited.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy findings in patients with long-standing bulimia nervosa. 259 94


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>