Eating Disorders and Obesity
eating disorder
disorders of food ingestion, regurgitation, or an attitude that affect health and well-being, such as anorexia, bulimia, or binge eating
binge
an out-of-control consumption of an amount of food that is far greater than what most people would eat in the same amount of time and under the same circumstances
serotonin
eating disorders linked to neurotransmitter _____ which is known to play in regulation of eating behavior and mood
negative affect
feeling bad; the experience of an emotional state characterized by negative emotions; may work to maintain binge eating
bulimia nervosa
frequent occurrence of binge-eating episodes accompanied by a sense of loss of control of overeating and recurrent inappropriate behavior such as purging or excessive exercise to prevent weight gain
grehlin
hormone produced by the stomach which is an appetite simulator
leptin
key element of homeostatic system; produced by fat cells and acts to reduce our intake of food; giving this to overweight patients doesn't help much bc they generally already have high levels
hypothalamus
key structure at the base of the brain; important in emotion and motivation; plays an important role in eating
restricting anorexia
limit quantity of food consumed
anorexia nervosa
literally means loss of appetite bc of nervousness. intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat. refusal to maintain even a minimally low body weight.
high rates of __________ can be found in relatives of patients with anorexia, bulimia, and BED
major depressive disorder
antidepressants
many patients respond well to treatment with _______
obesity
the condition of having elevated fat masses in the body; having a bmi of 30 or higher
two main categories of drugs that promote weight loss
1. reduces eating by suppressing appetite 2. prevents some nutrients in food from being absorbed
3 phases of family therapy, Maudsley model
1. refeeding phase 2. negotiations for a new pattern of relationships phase 3. termination phase
anorexia age group
15-19
bulimia age group
20-24
BED age group
30-50
set point
The tendency of our bodies to resist efforts to bring about a marked change (increase or decrease) in weight.
highest death rate of any psychiatric disorder
anorexia nervosa often die from medical complications (1) and suicide (2)
most affective long term treatment for morbidly obese people
bariatric or gastric bypass surgery
in Fijian culture
being skinny is associated with being ugly
family therapy
best choice of therapy now considered for adolescents with anorexia
obesity is more prevalent found in ethnic minorities, esp ______
black women
very effective treatment of choice for bulimia (often used with anorexia as well)
cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). great results. when added with medication, only gives a little more success. challenges categorizing food into "good" and "bad"
OCD
often found with anorexia nervosa and bulimia
eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS)
patterns of disordered eating that do not fit criteria for any specific diagnoses. most common form of eating disorder in clinical samples.
purge
refers to the removal of food from the body by such means as self-induced vomiting or misuse of laxatives, diuretics, and enemas
OCD and OCPD
relatives of people with anorexia have increase likelihood of ______
alcohol and drug dependence
relatives of people with bulimia have increased likelihood of _______
2 types of anorexia
restricting and binge-eating/purging
bulimia
seems to occur with people who had exposure to Western culture/ideals
binge-eating disorder (BED)
separate from bulimia nonpurging type; not in DSM; binges like patient with bulimia nervosa but doesn't regularly engage in "compensatory" behavior (purging, etc); less dietary restraint; associated with being overweight or even obese; more likely to have overvalued ideas about importance of weight and shape that overweight or obese patients who don't have BED
perfectionism
the need to get things exactly right; personality trait that may increase risk for the development of eating disorders, perhaps because perfectionist people may be more likely to idealize themselves
cognitive-behavioral therapy
therapy based on altering thoughts and cognitive distortions
purging type
type of bulimia that accounts for most cases
difference between bulimia nervosa and binge-eating/purging anorexia nervosa
weight. person w/ anorexia nervosa is severely underweight; not true with bulimia.
majority of people with anorexia, bulimia, and BED
xmajority of people with anorexia, bulimia, and BED have __________