'Diabulimia': Some Diabetic Girls
Skip Insulin in Dangerous Effort to Lose Weight
(February 20, 2007) -- ORLANDO, Florida - Like many teenage girls, Lee Ann Thill was
obsessed
with her appearance. A diabetic, she was already suffering from bulimia -
forcing herself to throw up to lose weight. But it was not enough, and she
recently had put on 20 pounds (9 kilograms).
Then one day at a camp for diabetic teens, she heard counselors scold
two girls for practicing "diabulimia" - not taking their insulin so they
could lose weight, one of the consequences of uncontrolled diabetes.
Do you not realize you could die if you skip your insulin? the counselor
scolded.
But Thill, who has Type 1, or juvenile diabetes, focused on this:
Skipping insulin equals weight loss. For the next 17 years, diabulimia was
her compulsion.
"I took just enough insulin to function," said Thill, now 34.
Today, she worries about the long-term damage that may have come from her
weight obsession. At 25, a blood vessel hemorrhage in her eye required
surgery. At 28, doctors told her she had damaged kidneys.
"I'm fearful for the future," Thill said. "I feel very strongly that had
I taken care of myself, I could have lived as long as anyone without
diabetes. I don't think that's going to happen now."
Diabulimia is usually practiced by teenage girls and young women, and it
may be growing more common as the secret is exchanged on Internet bulletin
boards for diabetics and those with
eating disorders. One expert who has
studied the phenomenon estimates that 450,000 Type 1 diabetic women in the
United States - one-third of the total - have skipped or shortchanged their
insulin to lose weight and are risking a coma and an early death.
"People who do this behavior wind up with severe diabetic complications
much earlier," said Ann Goebel-Fabbri, a clinical psychologist at the Joslin
Diabetes Center in Boston.
The American Diabetes Association has long known about insulin omission
as a way to lose weight. But "diabulimia" is a term that has only cropped up
in recent years and is not a recognized medical condition, said Barbara
Anderson, a pediatrics professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.
Type 1 diabetes is a disorder in which the body's immune system attacks
insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. People with this disease produce
little or no insulin, so they take shots of the hormone daily.
It differs from Type 2, the form associated with obesity and which
accounts for about 90 to 95 percent of all diabetes.
Insulin is vital for delivering glucose from the bloodstream to the
body's cells. Without insulin, cells starve even while the bloodstream
becomes burdened with too much glucose.
When Type 1 diabetics skip or reduce their insulin, they risk falling
into a coma or even dying. Blindness, amputations and kidney failure are
some of the possible long-term complications.
Warning signs for diabulimia include a change in eating habits -
typically someone who eats more but still loses weight - low energy and high
blood-sugar levels, Goebel-Fabbri said. Frequent urination is another
signal. When sugars are high, the kidneys work overtime to filter the excess
glucose from the blood.
This purging of sugar from the body through the kidneys is similar to
someone with
bulimia, who
binges and then purges, or vomits, Anderson said.
Studies show that women with Type 1 diabetes are twice as likely to
develop an eating disorder. Ironically, good diabetes management, which
requires a preoccupation with food, counting carbohydrates and following a
diet, may lead some to form an unhealthy association with food, Goebel-Fabbri
said.
Jacq Allan, 26, is a diabulimic. She said she had not taken her insulin
shots for two weeks and rarely takes them regularly. She weighs 42 pounds
(19 kilograms) less than she did a year ago.
Allan is stuck between two fears: taking insulin, which may lead to
weight gain, and the damage her destructive compulsion is doing to her body.
"I'm terrified of insulin," Allan said. "Every morning I wake up and
think maybe I should go to the hospital."
Diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes nearly three years ago, Allan said she can
feel the constant, sky-high sugar in her blood. Her list of ailments - chest
pain, heart palpitations, muscle cramps, bacterial infections and lower back
pain - are not the usual health problems of a twenty-something.
"I'm constantly worried that my eyes are going to go, but they seem
relatively OK for the moment," she said. "I always wonder if this will be
the day that some major organ fails. I kind of want something to happen
because then maybe I'll stop."
Source:: Associated Press
Last updated: 06/07
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