This paper addresses the importance of correctly classifying eating disordered patients as to their weight. There seems to be no consistent approach to classification using the three most commonly used weight classification schemes: the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company tables of 1959 and 1983 and
Interrelationships between the size of the pancreas and the weight of patients with eating disorders
โ Scribed by Cuntz, Ulrich ;Frank, Guido ;Lehnert, Peter ;Fichter, Manfred
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 350 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0276-3478
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โฆ Synopsis
Objective: Starvation severely affects normal pancreatic function in children suffering from Kwashiorkor and in animals undergoing food deprivation. This study examines whether pancreatic size, as determined by ultrasound, is dependent on starvation or on eating patterns in patients with eating disorders. Method: In 109 inpatients with eating disorders, 86 with anorexia nervosa and 23 with bulimia nervosa, we determined the pancreatic size by means of abdominal ultrasonography before increase in weight. Twenty-four inpatients with other psychiatric disorders served as controls. Pancreatic size was defined by the maximal diameter and the length of the head, the diameter of the head at the confluence of the splenic and mesenteric veins, and the diameters of the body and tail. In 41 eating disorder patients, pancreatic size was also measured during the course of therapy and increase in weight. Results: Pancreatic size correlates highly with body mass index (BMI). Counteracting actions such as purging do not seem to influence this pathophysiologic finding. Dystrophy of the pancreas is reversible in a short period of time. The increase in pancreatic size after maintenance of a normal eating pattern, however, exceeded the size expected by regression equation with an increase in the BMI. Pancreatic size seems to correlate with the actual amount of digested food. The increase in BMI is only an indicator of food intake. Discussion: Pancreatic size might therefore be useful for the assessment of normalization of the eating pattern. Future research is necessary to investigate the impairment of pancreatic function resulting from dystrophy, the impact of possible pancreatic malfunction on the course of eating disorders, and the regulatory mechanisms responsible for the change of pancreatic size.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The notion of using weight tables to categorize patients with eating disorders is at best Simplistic and at worst inappropriate. Available tables suffer from serious conceptual, sampling, and methodological deficiencies and are especially unsuited for use with young, white middle-class females: the
## Objective: This study was designed to explore among individuals with binge eating disorder (bed) perceptions of others' evaluation of their weight-related behavior and affect aroused by such. ## Method: Prior to treatment for binge eating and weight loss, 47 subjects diagnosed with bed complet