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Anorexia nervosa - Indicators |  | Anorexia nervosa - Indicators: Encyclopedia II - Anorexia nervosa - Indicators |  | Anorexic people may:
Anorexia nervosa - Physical.
be too thin and/or appear to have lost weight;
have dry skin and thinning hair;
suffer from poor health and sunken eyes;
have grown lanugo, a thin hair that grows all over their body as a natural physiological reaction to severe starvation that serves to keep the body warm in the absence of fat;
have fainting spells or otherwise pass out (an effect of starvation);
have amenorrhea, the absence of menstruatio ...
See also:Anorexia nervosa, Anorexia nervosa - Characteristics, Anorexia nervosa - Physiological, Anorexia nervosa - Psychological Sociological and Cultural, Anorexia nervosa - Clinical definition, Anorexia nervosa - Risk factors, Anorexia nervosa - Indicators, Anorexia nervosa - Physical, Anorexia nervosa - Behavioral, Anorexia nervosa - Treatment, Anorexia nervosa - Health care providers, Anorexia nervosa - Family and friends, Anorexia nervosa - Notable anorectics |  | | Anorexia nervosa, Anorexia nervosa - Behavioral, Anorexia nervosa - Characteristics, Anorexia nervosa - Clinical definition, Anorexia nervosa - Family and friends, Anorexia nervosa - Health care providers, Anorexia nervosa - Indicators, Anorexia nervosa - Notable anorectics, Anorexia nervosa - Physical, Anorexia nervosa - Physiological, Anorexia nervosa - Psychological Sociological and Cultural, Anorexia nervosa - Risk factors, Anorexia nervosa - Treatment, Bulimia nervosa, Pro-ana, Cachexia, Muscle dysmorphia (reverse anorexia nervosa), Orthorexia nervosa, Adi Barkan (photographer who has campaigned against use of anorexic models), Barbie syndrome, Anorexia Nervosa (band) a symphonic black metal band. |  | |
|  |  | Anorexia nervosa: Encyclopedia II - Anorexia nervosa - Indicators
Anorexia nervosa - Indicators
Anorexic people may:
Anorexia nervosa - Physical
- be too thin and/or appear to have lost weight;
- have dry skin and thinning hair;
- suffer from poor health and sunken eyes;
- have grown lanugo, a thin hair that grows all over their body as a natural physiological reaction to severe starvation that serves to keep the body warm in the absence of fat;
- have fainting spells or otherwise pass out (an effect of starvation);
- have amenorrhea, the absence of menstruation. Currently, the DSM-IV lists amenorrhea as a required characteristic of diagnosis, as it nearly always accompanies anorexia nervosa in females. However, while many emaciated women will never menstruate (unless they use a form of hormonal-replacement therapy), some women cease to have their menses before appreciable weight has been lost. Conversely, a small percentage of women reach weights that are quite low and still manage to menstruate regularly. Further, the eating disorders work group of the DSM is attempting to have the amenorrhea requirement removed as it makes diagnosis in males problematic. Researchers have often pointed to lack of sexual potency in males as the equivalent of female amenorrhea, but there continues to be a lack of consensus regarding this criterion.
Anorexia nervosa - Behavioral
- be secretive about their eating and try to not eat while being around others;
- eat in a ritualistic manner (this can encompass taking abnormally small bites, cutting food up into abnormally small pieces, being sullen during mealtimes, staring at their food whilst eating, holding cutlery in odd ways or at strange angles at times, or eating slowly, especially when putting food into the mouth);
- look longingly at or pay abnormal attention towards food but not eat it;
- cook wonderful meals for others but avoid eating the food they've made themselves;
- say they're too fat when they are not;
- talk about food a lot;
- plan their meals up to days in advance;
- possess an extensive knowledge about the food energy contents of the different types of food, and the energy-burning effects of each form of exercise. Although anorexics are less likely to choose fattening foods to eat, this is not always so. They may set their food-restriction objectives by food energy (calories) rather than by food type—for example, one may set a goal of 100 calories in a day and the food chosen to attain that number may very well be a cereal bar one day and an apple the next.
- abuse laxatives
- be perfectionists. A 2003 study by Sutandar-Pinnock and others analyzed the correlation between high perfectionism scores as measured by the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (MPS), and anorexia nervosa as measured by the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI). The control group participated in a family study, and was indirectly involved. The experimental groups were categorized as good outcome patients, who had regained weight after treatment; and poor outcomes, who did not regain weight after treatment. The mean scores for perfectionism in both good and poor outcome patients were higher than the control group, statistically significant. The perfectionism scores for the poor outcome were statistically significantly higher than the good outcome group in 4/5 categories.
Other related archives1983, 1999, 2004, 2005, Adi Barkan, Africa, Anorectic, Anorexia Nervosa (band), Ashlee Simpson, Australasia, BMI, Barbara Hutton, Barbie syndrome, Bulimia nervosa, Cachexia, Christina Ricci, Coming Home, Cosmopolitan, Daniel Johns, Elisa Donovan, Europe, European, Fiona Apple, Jane Fonda, Japan, Jessica Alba, Karen Carpenter, Kate Winslet, Lena Zavaroni, Mary-Kate Olsen, Muscle dysmorphia, Orthorexia nervosa, Osteoporosis, Overeaters Anonymous, Patty Duke, Princess Diana, Princess Victoria, Pro-ana, Sandra Dee, Scarlett Pomers, Silverchair, The Barbi Twins, Tracey Gold, Zinc, advertising, amenorrhea, amino acids, anemia, animal model, anorexia, antidepressants, anxiety, arsenic, asceticism, athletes, autism, autism spectrum disorder, beauty advertising, beryllium, binge-eating, black metal, body image, body weight, bulimic, calcium, caloric restriction, calories, central nervous system, chemical, child abuse, chronic, conditioned, cook, copper, cultural, cutlery, dancing, death, demographic, depression, distorted body image, diuretics, doctors, dopamine, eating disorder, enemas, exercise, fainting, fast, fat, feedback, females, food energy, forced-feeding, genetic, heart, heart attack, hospitalisation, hunger strike, immune system, intelligent, lanugo, laxatives, lead, love, magnesium, manic, marketing, mass media, meals, medical, menopause, menstruation, mental illnesses, mercury, minerals, mirror, modeling, mortality rate, mouth, neurotransmitter, obesity, obsessive-compulsive, obsessive-compulsive disordered, organ, parent, perfectionists, physiological, post-traumatic stress disorder, potassium, pro-ana, psychological, psychotherapy, psychotropic drugs, puberty, purging, relapse, religious, school, self-harm, serotonin, sexual abuse, socioeconomic, sociological, starvation, students, suicide, symphonic, teenage, the Americas, traumatic, tryptophan, underweight, university, vitamins, websites, weight loss
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Indicators", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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