Anorexia Nervosa: Symptoms and Treatment
Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder is which a person severely restricts foods as a means to lose weight or avoid gaining weight. This condition affects the way a person sees their body and can lead to life-threatening complications associated with malnutrition. Anorexia nervosa is a serious condition that requires treatment to help the person overcome the condition, accept their body, and consume the nutrients they need.
What Is Anorexia Nervosa?
Contributing Factors for Anorexia Nervosa
While a person can develop an eating disorder at any age, they are much more common in younger populations. This could be due to peer pressure as well as changes a person experiences in their body at a young age. Young people are also at risk for stressful transitions, such as going to a new school, the end of a relationship, moving, or the death of a loved one. Transitions in life are known to trigger anorexia behaviors2.
Doctors haven’t identified a single cause of eating disorders. Instead, there are often multiple contributing factors. Additional examples of potential contributing factors includes:
Biological:
If a person has a family history of an eating disorder, it’s possible they are at a higher risk for developing the disorder. Anorexia is specifically a disorder of control. Those affected typically try to gain control over their body by restricting food. As a result, people with character traits like sensitivity, perfectionism, and perseverance are more highly associated with having an eating disorder.
Environmental:
Societal standards and fame culture can affect people’s perceptions of a normal, healthy body. Unfortunately, some people associate success and self-worth with appearance, especially being thin. This can lead to a shift in values that causes a person to try to overly control their diet. Sometimes, a person may feel extreme peer pressure to be thin, and choose unhealthy practices such as restricting food to do so.
Psychological:
Sometimes, a person with anorexia may experience mental health disorders. An example of this includes obsessive-compulsive disorder, where a person is obsessed with controlling their diet. Another condition that commonly affects those with anorexia nervosa is anxiety. Restricting eating may give a person with anxiety perceived control over their life.
Complications of Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia is a serious medical condition that can be potentially fatal. A person needs calories for energy in order to survive. When they do not eat enough, their body will try to compensate. But without enough food, the organs and body will shut down.
Physical Complications
Examples of complications a person with anorexia symptoms could experience include:
- Anemia (low blood counts)
- Cardiac problems, including heart failure, abnormal heart rhythms and mitral valve prolapse
- Electrolyte abnormalities, including low blood chloride, potassium, and sodium
- Kidney dysfunction
- Low hormone levels that result in the absence of a period or muscle loss in men
- Stomach disorders, such as bloating, constipation and nausea
Mental Complications
Anorexia also takes a mental toll on a person. They may be more likely to abuse drugs and alcohol. They can also experience depression, anxiety and additional mood-related disorders. Sometimes, a person with anorexia may even have thoughts of self-injury or suicide. They may even attempt suicide.
The serious potential complications to physical and mental health make it important to seek treatment when anorexia is present.
What Are Anorexia Symptoms?
Physical Symptoms
Some of the most common symptoms associated with anorexia nervosa includes:
- Dizziness
- Extreme or sudden weight loss
- Not meeting developmental goals for weight gain
- Fatigue
- Bluish appearance of the fingers due to poor oxygen status
- Lanugo, a fine, white hair that grows on the body as a means to increase the body’s temperature
- Thinning hair
- Little muscle tone
- Frequent constipation and stomach pain
- Cold intolerance
- Dehydration
- Arm or leg swelling
Emotional and Behavioral Symptoms
In addition to physical symptoms of anorexia, a person may also exhibit emotional and behavioral symptoms. These include:
- Having a preoccupation with food, such as always talking about food or thinking about meals they will cook
- Cooking large meals for others, yet never eating any of the meals
- Often refusing food saying they are not hungry
- Having a strict diet to what they may term “safe” foods
- Refusing to eat in public
- Lying about eating more food than they actually have
- Frequently vocalizing a fear of gaining weight
- Reporting or complaining frequently they are too “fat”
- Displaying a flat mood or affect
- Withdrawing from society, friends, and activities they once enjoyed
Diagnosing Anorexia Nervosa
For a doctor to diagnose a person with anorexia, they must meet certain criteria. These include:
- Body weight of less than 85 percent than is normal for that individuals’ height or age.
- Significant fear of gaining weight or being “fat,” even though the person is underweight.
- Displaying misconceptions about their body or being very preoccupied with weight.
- Absence of at least three consecutive periods in women.
History of Anorexia Nervosa Treatment
Case Studies Usher in A New Understanding
Knowledge about anorexia and treatments did not become more widespread until the 1970s. At this time, an author named Hilde Bruch published a book that described case studies about people with eating disorders and obesity. As time has passed and more is understood about anorexia and the mental health conditions that may complicate it, the focus has shifted to holistic treatment. This means that medical professionals treat not only the condition, such as anorexia, they also treat underlying mental health disorders, such as anxiety or obsessive-compulsive disorder. Treating the whole person can ideally help to boost a person’s overall health.
Current Approaches to Anorexia Nervosa Treatment
Education Considerations and A 504 Plan
Inpatient Therapy
Sometimes, if the anorexia has been long-lasting, the individual is experiencing severe health effects or if they want more intensive help and therapy, inpatient treatment is an option. This may include hospitalization or going to a special facility that focuses on treating those with eating disorders.
When is Inpatient Therapy a Good Option?
Some of the key anorexia symptoms that indicate a person should seek inpatient treatment include:
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Severely low heart rate
- Rapid persistent weight loss, even after outpatient therapy
- Suicidal thoughts
- Refusal to eat
- Intractable vomiting
Re-Incorporating Nutrition
It’s important to note that a person suffering with anorexia can’t just suddenly start eating, even by force, and be healthy when the disease is severe. This is because those suffering from anorexia is typically so malnourished that their body has tried to compensate for the lost calories. Therefore, a doctor and nutritionist must make recommendations regarding how to help slowly re-incorporate nutrition into the person’s life.
Ideally, a person with anorexia will gain an average of two to three pounds per week while they are in inpatient therapy4.
Outpatient Therapy
Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy is another key aspect of anorexia treatment. While goals may vary based on the individual, some examples may include:
- helping a person recognize how their view of their body image may be distorted
- helping a person return to social settings without overly concentrating on food
- resuming physical activities that help a person feel healthy and strong
Family Based Therapies
According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, family-based therapies are especially promising, especially for adolescents with anorexia. Family therapies can include educational sessions that help the family learn about how to best care for and support a family member that has anorexia. Other hospital and treatment centers may offer what is known as the Maudsley method of family therapy. This is a three-phase approach to treatment that involves the family. Examples include:
- Phase 1: Doctors and other medical specialists meet with a person’s family to discuss strategies that can help a person increase their daily food intake.
- Phase 2: As a person with anorexia starts to increase their daily food intake, therapists then focus on the family behaviors that could potentially contribute to a relapse.
- Phase 3: Phase 3 recovery involves helping a young person with anorexia become more independent with their recovery.