Physical Fitness

 

Common Eating Disorders

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Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia is characterized by
(a) an intense and irrational fear of body fat and weight gain even when markedly underweight,
(b) relentless determination to become thinner and thinner, and
(c) a misperception of body weight and shape to the extent of feeling or seeing "fat" even when
emaciated.
 
The symptoms of anorexia nervosa include:
 
refusal to maintain normal body weight for age and height
weight at 85% or less than expected for age and height
intense fear of weight gain
distorted body image
in women, loss of three consecutive menstrual periods
denial of the dangers of low weight

Anorexia Athletica (Compulsive Exercising)

 

Anorexia athletica is not a recognized diagnosis in the same way that anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating
disorder are. However, many people who are preoccupied with food and weight exercise compulsively in
attempts to control weight in a misguided attempt to gain a sense of power, control, and self-respect.
 
Symptoms of anorexia athletica include:
 
exercising beyond the requirements for good health
being fanatical about weight and diet
stealing time from work, school, and relationships to exercise
focusing on challenge and forgetting that physical activity can be fun
defining self-worth in terms of performance
rarely or never being satisfied with athletic achievements
always pushing on to the next challenge
justifying excessive behaviour by defining self as an athlete or insisting that their behaviour is
healthy

Consequences of Anorexia

 
Ironically, most anorectics develop an intense interest in food and a fascination with recipes and cookbooks.
They spend many hours planning menus, buying groceries, and preparing meals for others, yet eat next to
nothing themselves. This preoccupation may grow stronger as the pounds continue to drop off.
 
Stringent dieting leads to muscle and fat loss. The body begins to look like a skeleton, bones protrude, legs
resemble matchsticks, and breasts disappear. Facial muscles tighten because there is no layer of fat beneath
the skin to cushion them.
 
Anorexia can last for many years and cause severe health problems. Besides weight loss and absence of
menstrual periods, the physical consequences of anorexia may include:
 
Anemia
Constipation, digestive discomfort, and abdominal bloating
Dehydration, muscle cramps, and tremors
Dental problems
Downy body hair on the face, back or arms
Dry skin
Dull and brittle hair
Excessively low blood pressure
Icy hands and feet
Irregular heartbeat
 
If anorexia remains untreated, it can be fatal. Some victims literally starve themselves to death or die of
conditions related to their malnourished state. Others commit suicide.

Bulimia Nervosa

 
Bulimia is characterized by self-perpetuating and self-defeating cycles of binge-eating and purging. A
person binges by rapidly consuming a large amount of food (or what s/he perceives to be a large amount)
in a discrete period of time and in an automatic and helpless manner. This may anesthetize hunger, anger,
sadness, and other feelings, but also creates physical discomfort and anxiety about weight gain. The
binge is then followed by attempts to rid the body of the food that was consumed, by engaging in
self-induced vomiting, use of laxatives, enemas, diuretics, excessive exercise, skipping meals, or dieting.
All these purging behaviours are harmful and unproductive.
 
Symptoms of bulimia nervosa include:
 
repeated episodes of bingeing and purging
feeling out of control while eating
purging after a binge (vomiting, using laxatives, diet pills, exercise, meal skipping, or
diuretics to rid body of food)
frequent dieting
belief that self-worth requires being thin, and extreme concern with body weight and shape
person may shoplift or abuse alcohol, drugs, credit cards, sex
weight may be "normal"
 

Consequences of Bulimia

 
Unlike anorectics, most bulimics know that their behavior is abnormal and that their eating binges are not
merely ordinary overeating. They also know that anxiety and depression sometimes trigger their episodes.
However, they are usually unable to break the binge and purge cycle without professional help.
 
If you have bulimia, you're probably fascinated with food. You enjoy reading articles about food, buying
cookbooks, and talking about food and cooking. Food and eating become ways to escape from life's many
stresses.
 
You probably plan well for your binges, hoarding food, buying special treats, and preparing elaborate dishes.
The foods you choose may be those you do not let yourself have at other times because you think they are
"bad" and will make you gain weight. Sweets fit into this category.
 
You are also careful to conceal your illness. You may go to a number of different stores so that your
purchases do not cause attention. Perhaps you tell the checkout clerks that you have a large family or are
planning a party as a way to explain your overflowing shopping cart.
 
During the binge, you may abandon normal table manners and stuff yourself, gulping food as fast as you
can. If you are sure you will not be discovered, you may eat at a more normal pace. By the time you're
finished, you may have consumed 3 to 30 times more than you would normally eat in a day.
 
You probably have a secret place to binge&emdash;perhaps a closet. You have also found ways to vomit without
being discovered; locked bathrooms are a popular choice. Because of your secrecy, you may have been able
to hide your binge and purge episodes from your parents, husband, siblings, or roommates for years.
 
This destructive behavior eventually takes a toll on your body. Physical consequences of bulimia include:
 
Broken blood vessels in the face and bags under the eyes
Dehydration, fainting spells, tremors, and blurred vision
Indigestion, cramps, abdominal discomfort, bloating, gas and constipation
Internal bleeding and infections
Laxative dependency and damage to the bowels
Liver and kidney damage
Loss of tooth enamel from repeated vomiting
Suicidal depression
Swollen glands in the neck under the jaw.
Upset of the body's fluid/mineral balance, possibly causing rapid or irregular heartbeats or even a
heart attack
Weight fluctuations from alternating diets and binges
Rupture of the esophagus (upper gastric tract)
 
Though bulimia is not as deadly as anorexia, fatalities do occur.



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