Researchers Examine 'Purging Disorder'
(September 19, 2007) -- DES MOINES, Iowa - An Iowa researcher is studying
a little-known
eating disorder that some doctors may miss: purging disorder.
Though similar to women with
bulimia, patients who fit this description
don't binge-eat. Yet they feel compelled to purge, usually by vomiting, even
after eating only a small or normal amount of food, said Pamela Keel, the
University of Iowa researcher who led a study on the subject.
Keel, a psychology professor, and colleagues from Iowa and the Harvard
Medical School describe their research in this month's issue of Archives of
General Psychiatry.
"Purging disorder is new in the sense that it has not been officially
recognized as a unique condition in the classification of eating disorders.
But it's not a new problem," Keel said. "Women were struggling with purging
disorder long before we began studying it."
If further study supports that it is a distinct disorder, Keel said the
American Psychiatric Association could revise its criteria for diagnosing
eating disorders. That's important because doctors could then better screen
these patients and identify treatments for them. Otherwise, they might be
missed because they are normal weight and don't report
binge-eating, she
said.
"The bottom line is there are women out there right now who have this
condition, and very little is being done to figure out why they have this
problem or how to help them with it," Keel said.
The study focused on women because they are about 10 times more likely
than
men to suffer from bulimia, in which people compulsively overeat and
then force themselves to vomit, fast, take laxatives or exercise excessively
to burn calories.
The dangers of purging disorder are similar to those of bulimia:
psychological problems, dehydration, electrolyte imbalances that can affect
the heart and kidneys, and potential dental problems because of self-induced
vomiting.
Keel's research, conducted from 2001-05, was funded by the National
Institute of Mental Health. The study looked at 90 women: 20 women had
symptoms of purging disorder, 37 had bulimia and purged after binge-eating,
and 33 had no eating disorders. Each woman was interviewed about her eating
habits, drank a liquid meal and had blood drawn before and after the meal.
Keel said there were significant differences in the groups when it came
to satiety, or feeling full.
In response to the liquid meal, women with purging disorder and those who
had no eating disorder had similar levels of a chemical called
cholecystokinin. It is released from the upper tract of the small intestine
and appears to signal people to stop eating.
"That makes sense, because in terms of eating patterns, women with
purging disorder are not actually eating more" than the women who had no
eating disorder, Keel said. The bulimic women had lower levels of the
chemical.
The women with purging disorder said they felt much more full after the
test meal, and they reported more stomach discomfort than the bulimic women
and the women with no eating disorders.
"It kind of begins to provide a clue for why these women may feel a need
to purge after eating an amount of food that most people would be fine with.
They are actually responding to it differently," Keel said.
The women with purging disorder and the bulimics shared emotional and
psychological characteristics, including
body image problems,
anxiety and
depression. Both groups also had strict rules about what they could eat and
when, Keel said.
Keel "has helped put purging disorder on the map" as something that
should be studied, said Dr. Tim Walsh, professor of psychiatry at Columbia
University Medical Center.
Many people with eating disorders don't meet all of the criteria for
anorexia or bulimia, "so it suggests that we need additional descriptions to
help patients," he said. Walsh heads a work group with the American
Psychiatric Association that is charged with revising criteria for
diagnosing such disorders.
Leslie Sim, a psychology professor and consultant with the Mayo Clinic's
eating disorders program, called Keel a "great researcher" in the field and
said her findings were new and interesting.
Sim said current criteria "are kind of limiting for diagnosis and
treatment and also for reimbursement by insurance companies."
Keel is recruiting subjects for another study, which she said will look
more closely into factors that give rise to the unique response to eating by
women who have purging disorder.
Source: Associated Press
Last updated: 09/07
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