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An update on eating disorders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2020

Jane Morris
Affiliation:
MA, MB BChir (Cantab), FRCPsych, is a consultant psychiatrist at the Royal Cornhill Hospital, Aberdeen, UK, and lead clinician for the North of Scotland Managed Clinical Network in Eating Disorders.
Stephen Anderson*
Affiliation:
BSc(Hons), MB ChB, FRCPsych, is a consultant psychiatrist in eating disorders in the Eating Disorder Service, NHS Forth Valley, Stirling, UK, and Chair of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Scotland's Faculty of Eating Disorders.
*
Correspondence Stephen Anderson. Email: stephenanderson@nhs.net
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Summary

Eating disorders are heterogeneous disorders characterised by a maladaptive drive to lose weight and, for the most part, by extreme fear of weight gain and overvaluation of thin body image. Calorie restriction, overexercise and purging behaviours put some sufferers at high risk of physical morbidity and mortality. Mental preoccupations interfere with social, professional and general quality of life. Patients’ defensive secrecy and compulsivity can make it hard to diagnose and treat such disorders despite the suffering they involve. Integrated medical and psychiatric intervention can save life and safely improve nutrition. Behavioural support – with family and carer involvement when appropriate – can counter the dysregulation that leads to vicious cycles of restriction–binge–purge, helping patients develop new skills to regulate emotion without weight losing. In the future, exciting developments in neuroimaging, neurosurgery and pharmacology may lead to ways to make the brain more responsive to therapy. Insights into risk factors may also improve preventive strategies in a climate of highly sophisticated international electronic communication.

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Articles
Copyright
© The Authors 2020
Figure 0

TABLE 1 Main features of the eating disorders

Figure 1

TABLE 2 Possible signs and symptomsa

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