Don't Wait to Treat Early Forms of Bulimia: Experts
12 May, 2004 By Alison McCook -
Teens who binge and purge less frequently than full-blown
bulimics resemble bulimics in many ways, and should therefore be
treated as if they had the condition, researchers argue in a new report.
The investigators compared the characteristics of teens with
"partial-syndrome" bulimia nervosa, in which they exhibited the typical
characteristics of bulimia-binge eating followed by a purge.
Partial-syndrome progresses to bulimia when binging and purging occurs
at least twice per week for 3 months.
The researchers found that teens with bulimia and partial-syndrome
bulimia showed similar levels of
self-esteem and
depression.
The findings suggest that doctors should treat partial-syndrome
bulimia as seriously as they do full-blown bulimia, study author Dr.
Daniel le Grange of the University of Chicago told Reuters Health.
"We shouldn't 'wait' for someone with a partial syndrome presentation
to develop the full syndrome before we intervene," he said.
An estimated 1 to 5 percent of teen girls develop full-blown bulimia.
The partial form of the condition is even more common, with recent
research estimating that between 10 and 50 percent of teen girls and
boys binge eat and purge on a
frequent basis.
To investigate how partial bulimia differs from bulimia, le Grange
and his colleagues surveyed a sample of 120 teens in an eating disorder
program. All teens were diagnosed with anorexia, bulimia or
partial-syndrome bulimia.
Reporting in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, the
researchers found "more similarities than differences" between bulimics
and partial-syndrome bulimics. In contrast, teens with either form of
bulimia differed from those with anorexia on "almost every variable
examined," the authors note.
For instance, compared with bulimic teens, those with anorexia tended
to weigh less and be younger, and were more likely to come from intact
families.
Partial-syndrome bulimics were asked how many times each week they
binged--meaning, how many times they overate and felt as if they lost
control over food.
Using established guidelines, interviewers estimated that partial
bulimics binged less than once per week. However, teens themselves said
they felt like they had binged around 5 times each week, even if they
had only eaten a normal or small amount.
Although binging often goes hand-in-hand with purging, partial
bulimics purged more than 4 times per week, which more closely matches
their perception of how many times they had binged, rather than the
actual number of episodes.
"It would appear that the size of the binge does not matter to the
adolescent--it is the perception of being out of control and the
concomitant distress that lead to purging," le Grange explained.
SOURCE: Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, May 2004
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